Year: 1986
Place: Los Angeles
Palm trees, a wild sweet breeze, fortunes told, green tea leaves, naked hips, Freudian slips, loose lips, sandalwood embers in warm amber sunsets, a city of angels with no angels, a haven for heathens, cowboys and nymphos.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is the scent of late-afternoon heat moving through open windows, when the air turns dry and the city feels a little reckless. It suits close conversation, worn denim, and that charged, windblown moment when skin, suede and smoke seem to blur together.
How to wear
Best in spring through early fall, especially in warm, dry weather where its woody spice and suede notes can breathe. Apply lightly to avoid overpowering the airy freshness; it projects clearly at first, then settles into a softer skin scent over several hours.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like woody-spicy fragrances with a dry, textured feel rather than sweetness. It will appeal to those drawn to cardamom, cedar, hay and suede, and to scents that feel sun-warmed, slightly smoky and quietly sensual.
Release year
1986
Collaborators
Jessie Willner and Hanover Booth, Discothèque’s founders, shaped the brand’s concept and the fragrance’s cultural brief, translating a specific Los Angeles moment into scent rather than simply commissioning a generic woody composition.
Discothèque’s story
Discotheque is a young niche house with a minimalist, modern sensibility and a focus on clean, vegan formulas made in the UK. Its aesthetic leans polished but unruly, pairing refined composition with a distinctly West Coast attitude.
Heathens Cowboys And The Santa Ana Winds’s concept
Set in Los Angeles in 1986, the fragrance sketches a city of heat, wind and half-spoken seduction: palm trees, green tea leaves, sandalwood embers and the Santa Ana breeze. The result is a cinematic portrait of sun-baked freedom with a smoky, leathered undercurrent.
Extra info
The name points to a specific Los Angeles scene in 1986, and the bottle is part of Discotheque’s square, minimalist design with a magnetic cap. The formula is marketed as vegan and free of parabens, phthalates and EDTA.
Year: 1986
Place: Los Angeles
Palm trees, a wild sweet breeze, fortunes told, green tea leaves, naked hips, Freudian slips, loose lips, sandalwood embers in warm amber sunsets, a city of angels with no angels, a haven for heathens, cowboys and nymphos.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is the scent of late-afternoon heat moving through open windows, when the air turns dry and the city feels a little reckless. It suits close conversation, worn denim, and that charged, windblown moment when skin, suede and smoke seem to blur together.
How to wear
Best in spring through early fall, especially in warm, dry weather where its woody spice and suede notes can breathe. Apply lightly to avoid overpowering the airy freshness; it projects clearly at first, then settles into a softer skin scent over several hours.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like woody-spicy fragrances with a dry, textured feel rather than sweetness. It will appeal to those drawn to cardamom, cedar, hay and suede, and to scents that feel sun-warmed, slightly smoky and quietly sensual.
Release year
1986
Collaborators
Jessie Willner and Hanover Booth, Discothèque’s founders, shaped the brand’s concept and the fragrance’s cultural brief, translating a specific Los Angeles moment into scent rather than simply commissioning a generic woody composition.
Discothèque’s story
Discotheque is a young niche house with a minimalist, modern sensibility and a focus on clean, vegan formulas made in the UK. Its aesthetic leans polished but unruly, pairing refined composition with a distinctly West Coast attitude.
Heathens Cowboys And The Santa Ana Winds’s concept
Set in Los Angeles in 1986, the fragrance sketches a city of heat, wind and half-spoken seduction: palm trees, green tea leaves, sandalwood embers and the Santa Ana breeze. The result is a cinematic portrait of sun-baked freedom with a smoky, leathered undercurrent.
Extra info
The name points to a specific Los Angeles scene in 1986, and the bottle is part of Discotheque’s square, minimalist design with a magnetic cap. The formula is marketed as vegan and free of parabens, phthalates and EDTA.