

And since I'm in the mood for aquatic scents at the moment, while being terribly picky, my curiosity was piqued even more.Īnd then it arrived. That could make for an interesting, intense, somewhat rock-wild scent, I thought. I was even in Brighton once, though only a single afternoon passing through on a rainy day in the cold autumn, but I remember a lovely bench right on the deserted shore and the view of sea-green, violently whipped-up water.

The orange of the bottle matches this, alarming, vibrant, toned down a bit so it doesn't get too bloody aggressive. The name suggests something powerful, rock in fact, rock music, power! Also fits a thriller, excitement, a gripping story, perhaps a detective challenge, social condition structure in one of the most famous seaside resorts in England, possibly a touch of abyss. I couldn't help thinking of that while testing Brighton Rock, even though I know from Smellie13's very insightful comment that the name doesn't refer to music.īrighton Rock. I wondered for years why no one seemed to notice that but me. What made the difference was solely their appearance, stage outfit and makeup. I've been on the fringes of the local music scene for a few years and I've always noticed that some bands were called rock bands, punks, goths or hard rock bands, which I would have musically classified more under pop, soft rock, sometimes even almost under Schlager.
