Skip to main content
Get 50% off your first month of Scentbird
Exclusive

Room 1015
Yesterday

1213 ratings
Eau de Parfum, Unisex
Full-size bottle
 · 25 products left
$155
3.4 oz

Room 1015 - Yesterday

Yesterday is a fragrance as demanding and elusive as our dreams. Chilled geranium and fresh lavender slowly transform into hazy, warm cardamom and sweet, crisp apple. Bergamot blends into davana and ambroxan. Nothing is as it seems in this shifting, flowing funhouse scent.
Stop and smell these
Featured notes
Learn more about the top, middle, and bottom notes in this fragrance.
Lavender is one of the oldest, and most common perfume ingredients in the world. It’s gentlemanly, scrubbed, soapy/powdery feel is a staple of men’s colognes. Lavender has a slightly spicy edge as well, which makes it a universally blendable note in perfume. It can add a clean edge to aromatic or animalic scents, and deepen zesty citrus notes with its subtle, herbal facets. But most of all, lavender is associated with fresh, clean, pure, old-school elegance. It’s well-heeled sophistication is appropriate for any time of year, and it makes an excellent choice for either sex to wear casually or formally.
Explore fragrances with Lavender
Explore all notes
Fragrance family
Woody Fruity
Fragrances in the Woody Fruity family open with fruit and citrus top notes that soften and add warmth to the woods. These scents beautifully balance the juxtaposition of bright, fresh notes with the creamy smoothness of woods.
Learn more
But don't just take our word for it
Here's how others described
the scent
The Scentbird community has spoken, and this is how reviewers categorized this scent.
  • Strong31%
  • Warm30%
  • Fresh16%
  • Light11%
  • Powdery6%
  • Sweet3%
About the brand
Explore Room 1015
Room 1015
Stop, rewind. A shiny black stretch limo with tinted windows and gleaming hubcaps pulls up to 8104 Sunset Boulevard. Sepia Polaroid, freeze frame. Time to wind back an old cassette with a pencil to a time when the Continental Hyatt Hotel, aka the “Riot House,” was the place to be.
The 70s was a decade of total delirium for any self-respecting rock group. And L.A. was an inevitable stop on the journey. Between concerts, there were three commandments in the Bible of Rock that all managers had to obey: a crowd of totally hysteric fans in the hotel lobby or, more often, in the darkness of an unmade bed, the tour rider to be followed religiously (24 pages about how to present the yogurt for Metallica) and the art of trashing a hotel room. A place of debauchery and nihilism.
Rumor has it that Holiday Inn rooms had an annoying reputation for being as boring as they were destructive to the soul. When you put wild animals in a cage and keep them in a confined space, it’s no surprise if they end up out of control. After all, they’re born to be wild. So, furniture goes flying, fire extinguishers start spraying, beds break and walls crack. When the California heat wilts the palm trees and burns rubber tires, rock ‘n’ roll turns the volume up to 11. There’s an uncontrollable urge to break everything, to turn everything upside-down.
The Riot House trembled on more than one occasion, but never fell down. In 1972, a TV flew out of Room 1015 and landed 10 floors below in a corner of the parking lot. Keith Richards and Bobby Keys – the Stones’ sax player at the time – didn’t think it worked very well. Q.E.D.
Not to mention the motorcycles in the hallways, the rooftop pool overflowing with bubbles, Jim Morrison dangling from a balcony, the epic battles of Keith Moon from The Who… Or, even more iconic, the Christ-like Robert Plant who took himself for a Golden God above the Sunset Trip with his angel’s hair, Nepalese bracelets and skimpy T-shirt, convinced that he had finally found the Stairway to Heaven.
The electric opiate years. No reason, no faith, no laws and definitely no taboos. Sexual liberation and universal love. But, above all, the metronome of an unprecedented creative explosion. Don’t forget that Lemmy Kilmister wrote the song “Motorhead” on a night off at the Riot House.
Today, Room 1015 remains a place of contemplation. The nostalgia of an era of absolute freedom, where the air still holds the lingering smells of sweat, leather, fur, alcohol, a burned patchouli leaf and an open flight case…
The Eagles sang “Hotel California,” with its supposed satanic undercurrents. There were certainly untamed demons in every hotel room from San Francisco to Las Vegas, from Hollywood to Venice Beach. But Room 1015 clearly outnumbered them all.
Learn more
Fragrances from Room 1015
In good company
People who loved Yesterday also like
Defer to the crowd
750 reviews
Here's what our customers had to say about this product.
3.5
1213 ratings
  • 451
  • 226
  • 222
  • 122
  • 192
Log in to write a review
Filter reviews
  • SN
    Sara N.
    09/13/2024
    Reviews  8
    Products received  0
    Didn’t like it
    Smells like cologne
    0
    0
  • A<
    Allison <.
    09/11/2024
    Reviews  6
    Products received  25
    Too masculine smelling. It would be good for a young man.
    Smells masculine.
    0
    0
  • JM
    JENNIFER M.
    09/07/2024
    Reviews  9
    Products received  0
    Didn’t like
    Old lady like
    0
    0
  • RW
    Rebecca W.
    08/29/2024
    Reviews  6
    Products received  0
    So, SO good
    A bit on the powdery side but in a sweet nostalgic way. Love to wear this one when I'm chilling with my gals. The carrier products do smell a bit chemical so if you are sensitive to this you may get a headache.
    My ratings
    Spicy
    Mysterious
    Everyday
    Fall
    Light
    Refined
    0
    0
  • BP
    BRI P.
    08/10/2024
    Reviews  8
    Products received  1
    faveeeeeee
    this was like a softer, a little more fem version of electric wood. which was my fave. now they're tied
    My ratings
    Woody
    Mysterious
    Everyday
    Winter
    Warm
    Refined
    0
    0
Explore new arrivals
Room 1015
Yesterday
scent world
featuring: Michael Partouche
Michael went from being a pharmacist by trade to being a
rocker by trade. He says the guitar was his salvation. At a
certain point he leaned into fragrance as a medium for
olfactive counterculture, a bridge between chemistry and art.