Frequent Flyer City Rhythm
At a glance
Is Frequent Flyer City Rhythm worth trying?
Frequent Flyer by City Rhythm is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening wear in Fall
- Performance feel
- Very Good longevity with Strong sillage
- Signature profile
- amber, musky, woody with Almond, Jasmine, Cedar
The first impression
Frequent Flyer by City Rhythm is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Frequent Flyer was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Niles Ramadhin. Top notes are Almond, Jasmine and Cedar; middle notes are Ambroxan, Timbersilk™, Iso E Super and Hedione; base notes are Terpineol, Amber Xtreme, Melonal and Ambrette (Musk Mallow).
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Niles Ramadhin
Niles Ramadhin is a perfumer who has created multiple fragrances for City Rhythm, including 86.41, Frequent Flyer, Manhattan, Miami, Miami Tropical Confessions, Pulse, Rhythm, and San Diego. These scents often evoke urban and tropical themes. His work is characterized by vibrant, energetic compositions suited to modern lifestyles.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Frequent Flyer City Rhythm
Essence
The one who favors Frequent Flyer City Rhythm is ruled by the Explorer archetype-a soul restless for movement, novelty, and the intoxicating rush of the unknown. Like Odysseus or Marco Polo, they are drawn to the horizon not out of mere curiosity, but because stillness feels like a slow death. The scent itself-urban, dynamic, with hints of transience-mirrors their essence: a being who thrives in motion, who finds home in departure as much as arrival.
Yet, the Explorer is not merely a tourist. They are a seeker, one who believes that life’s meaning is found not in permanence, but in the accumulation of experiences, the shifting landscapes of cities and souls. Their philosophy is simple yet profound: To stand still is to stagnate; to move is to live.
Shadow
Yet, beneath the glamour of the wandering life lies a quiet emptiness. The Explorer risks becoming a perpetual outsider, never truly belonging anywhere. Their avoidance of roots can harden into emotional detachment, a reluctance to commit not just to places, but to people, ideas, even themselves.
Their greatest fear? Being trapped. This dread can manifest as impulsiveness-abrupt career shifts, sudden departures, an inability to sit with discomfort. They may mistake motion for growth, confusing novelty with depth. In darker moments, they may wonder: If I stop moving, will I disappear?
Conclusion
Their tastes are eclectic, shaped by the many places they’ve touched. They prefer minimalist, functional elegance-clothes that transition seamlessly from a Tokyo café to a New York loft. Their wardrobe is a curated archive of memories: a leather jacket from Berlin, a scarf bought in Istanbul, boots that have walked through rain-slicked Parisian streets. They collect not objects, but sensations-the taste of an unfamiliar spice, the cadence of a foreign language, the way light falls differently in each city.
Their relationships are intense but transient, like a firework’s arc-bright, dazzling, then gone. They attract others effortlessly, their charm a mix of confidence and mystery. But intimacy is a paradox for them: they crave deep connection yet fear the weight of permanence. Their lovers and friends often find themselves chasing a ghost, left with only the lingering trace of their presence-much like the fading notes of their signature scent.