2017 Marquis d'Angerville Volnay 1er Cru "Champans"

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Type of Wine | Red |
---|---|
Country | France |
Region | |
Appellation | |
Vintage | 2017 |
Grape | |
Content (Alc) | 0.75 ltr (13.5%) |
Drink window | 2024 - 2040 |
In stock
6 items available
Description
In 1507, a royal officer, secretary of the accounts, was sent to Volnay to make an inventory of the former properties of the Dukes of Burgundy, now in the hands of the crown of France. An epidemic of plague discouraged the officer from entering Volnay. To fulfill his mission, he asked thirty-eight Volnaysians to make a “fair and accurate” survey of the Volnay estate. This survey is part of a huge volume, about twelve centimeters thick, dated 1507, which is preserved in the municipal archives of Dijon. The description is indeed accurate. We recognize the Volnay appellations that are still well known today (Champans, Caillerets, Fremiet, Taillepieds, etc.), and the report specifies in particular that "the King has an undivided third party in the Sous Roiches vines, that these vines are worked 52 and a half, that the total of the King's vines amounts to 275 vineyards, mainly located in Caillerets, Fremiet, Champans, l'Ormeau and Taillepieds.
The vines designated by the term “assises Sous Roiches” are in reality the Clos des Ducs, which the villagers could not call so without risking the wrath of their new sovereign. But the magnificent Clos des Ducs, formerly owned by the Dukes of Burgundy, eventually kept its name and even today its surface area amounts to around 52 ouvrières (2.15 hectares).
The production of great wines begins with respect for the terroir and control over yields in the vineyard. Cultivation practices are respectful of the soil and the plant, and yields are limited, thanks to quality grape varieties (the work of selecting the best plants by Sem and Jacques d'Angerville resulted in the recognition in the early 1950s of a particularly fine and not very productive variety, called “Pinot d'Angerville”). The soil is worked with a plough and when a vine is uprooted, the plot is left in lucerne for three years before being replanted.
The conversion of Domaine Marquis d'Angerville to biodynamics, started in 2006, was completed in 2009. It is a delicate process that is only possible if the team is convinced. As Pierre Masson said: “…in biodynamic agriculture, the human being is the central element. It is the quality of one's vision, one's ability to perceive situations, one's ability to make a judgement and to act that determines the success of a farm and its sustainability.”
Domaine Marquis d'Angerville owns 3.98 hectares in the Champans appellation, just north of the Caillerets appellation. Two parallel parcels make up the appellation's share (11 hectares in total). They extend from the top to the bottom of the Champans climate and hills, thus benefiting from all the characteristics of this remarkable south-east facing terroir, located in the centre of the Volnay Premiers Crus. The soil is poorer, resting on a rocky limestone bench at the top of the hill, while the slope decreases towards the bottom, becoming more clayey, stony and deep.
Historically classified Têtes de Cuvée de Volnay, Champans is the archetype of the great Volnay 1er cru: finesse, fullness and length on the palate with an extra generosity and power specific to it. Depending on the vintage, it deserves 5 to 10 years of aging to fully reveal itself, but it is generally easier to approach young than Taillepieds or Clos des Ducs.
FACT : The wine is in our conditioned Wine Warehouse and if you come to pick up the wine you will often also receive a nice discount. You will see the possible discount immediately if you choose Pick up on the Checkout page. We are located almost next to the Rijksweg with plenty of parking. Click here for address.
Specifications
Type of Wine | Red |
---|---|
Country | France |
Region | Bourgogne |
Appellation | Volnay |
Icons | Icon France |
Grape | Pinot Noir |
Biological certified | No |
Natural wine | No |
Vegan | No |
Vintage | 2017 |
Drinking as of | 2024 |
Drinking till | 2040 |
Alcohol % | 13.5 |
Alcohol free/low | No |
Content | 0.75 ltr |
Oak aging | Yes |
Sparkling | No |
Dessert wine | No |
Closure | Cork |
Parker rating | 93 |
Vinous rating | 94 |
Professional Reviews
Parker
The Wine Advocate
RP (91-93)
Reviewed by:
William Kelley
The 2017 Volnay 1er Cru Les Champans was showing especially well, bursting with expressive aromas of rose petal, ripe wild berries, blood orange rind and dark chocolate. On the palate, the wine is medium to full-bodied, rich and textural, with a layered core of concentrated fruit, fine structuring tannins and a long finish. The suppleness of the vintage has tempered Champans' tendency to structural muscularity but not its fleshy fruit, making for a delightful gourmand wine.
The 2017 portfolio is charming, perfumed and emphatically Volnaysien at the Domaine Marquis d'Angerville, and Guillaume d'Angerville and his team should be very proud of their achievement. The suppleness and charm of the vintage at its best has tempered the muscularity of which the Domaine's more structural wines—Champans, Taillepieds and Clos des Ducs—are capable in firmer, more tight-knit vintages, but these Volnays don't lack depth or concentration. The obvious analogy is with the Domaine's 2007s. Followers of d'Angerville will be familiar with the protocol here: destemmed grapes, classical macerations and élevage in barrels of which 20% are new, older barrels generally being retained for five vintages. While the wines aren't marked by new oak, they aren't quite as backward and slow to evolve as they were in the days of Guillaume d'Angerville's father, and that will be especially true of these 2017s, wines that will in many cases deliver a great deal of pleasure in the near- and medium-term.
Published: Jan 04, 2019
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
(92-94)
Drinking Window
2022 - 2040
From: 2017 Burgundy: A Modern Classic (Jan 2019)
The 2017 Volnay Les Champans 1er Cru is tasted from two barrels. It demonstrates wonderful grace and precision with mineral-infused cranberry and wild strawberry fruit. There is a sense of vitality and sophistication here. The palate is medium-bodied with fine grain tannin. The oak is beautifully integrated, notes of orange rind and even just a subtle touch of honey towards the relatively powerful and sustained finish that just feels audacious. Wonderful.
- By Neal Martin on October 2018
Driving into the front courtyard at the domaine, I almost drive into workers busy erecting a large awning. Guillaume d’Angerville’s daughter is due to be married the following weekend and the winery is hosting the reception dinner, which begs the question, what wine do you serve with the canapés?
I tasted the 2017s with Guillaume and cellar-master François Duvivier in the cellars. “It is the first vintage since 2009 with decent volume,” d’Angerville informed me with relief in his voice. “There was no mildew pressure after a good flowering and the season was fine. We just waited for some rain at the end of August. When there was some rain on August 27 and 28, it gave us the phenolic ripeness without the dilution. We started the picking on September 3 and finished five days later in Clos des Ducs as usual, the yields around 35 to 40hl/ha.” D’Angerville also told me he is reflecting upon the percentage of new oak and whether to reduce it in the future, concerned that it can obscure terroir. Personally, I find it optimal with respect to their wines, including these 2017s, a strong set from a trouble-free growing season. Here, I always find an irresistible interplay between the sumptuousness of Volnay and the nobility of d’Angerville. D’Angerville cited the 2007 as a comparable vintage in terms of its approachable nature, though personally I find that the wines have more stuffing. The most promising wine is predictably the magnificent Clos des Ducs and also Les Champans, from a vineyard that appears to perform well this vintage.
Oh, and to answer the question, I believe guests were given a glass of Clos des Ducs at the reception.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
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In 1507, a royal officer, secretary of the accounts, was sent to Volnay to make an inventory of the former properties of the Dukes of Burgundy, now in the hands of the crown of France. An epidemic of plague discouraged the officer from entering Volnay. To fulfill his mission, he asked thirty-eight Volnaysians to make a “fair and accurate” survey of the Volnay estate. This survey is part of a huge volume, about twelve centimeters thick, dated 1507, which is preserved in the municipal archives of Dijon. The description is indeed accurate. We recognize the Volnay appellations that are still well known today (Champans, Caillerets, Fremiet, Taillepieds, etc.), and the report specifies in particular that "the King has an undivided third party in the Sous Roiches vines, that these vines are worked 52 and a half, that the total of the King's vines amounts to 275 vineyards, mainly located in Caillerets, Fremiet, Champans, l'Ormeau and Taillepieds.
The vines designated by the term “assises Sous Roiches” are in reality the Clos des Ducs, which the villagers could not call so without risking the wrath of their new sovereign. But the magnificent Clos des Ducs, formerly owned by the Dukes of Burgundy, eventually kept its name and even today its surface area amounts to around 52 ouvrières (2.15 hectares).
The production of great wines begins with respect for the terroir and control over yields in the vineyard. Cultivation practices are respectful of the soil and the plant, and yields are limited, thanks to quality grape varieties (the work of selecting the best plants by Sem and Jacques d'Angerville resulted in the recognition in the early 1950s of a particularly fine and not very productive variety, called “Pinot d'Angerville”). The soil is worked with a plough and when a vine is uprooted, the plot is left in lucerne for three years before being replanted.
The conversion of Domaine Marquis d'Angerville to biodynamics, started in 2006, was completed in 2009. It is a delicate process that is only possible if the team is convinced. As Pierre Masson said: “…in biodynamic agriculture, the human being is the central element. It is the quality of one's vision, one's ability to perceive situations, one's ability to make a judgement and to act that determines the success of a farm and its sustainability.”
Domaine Marquis d'Angerville owns 3.98 hectares in the Champans appellation, just north of the Caillerets appellation. Two parallel parcels make up the appellation's share (11 hectares in total). They extend from the top to the bottom of the Champans climate and hills, thus benefiting from all the characteristics of this remarkable south-east facing terroir, located in the centre of the Volnay Premiers Crus. The soil is poorer, resting on a rocky limestone bench at the top of the hill, while the slope decreases towards the bottom, becoming more clayey, stony and deep.
Historically classified Têtes de Cuvée de Volnay, Champans is the archetype of the great Volnay 1er cru: finesse, fullness and length on the palate with an extra generosity and power specific to it. Depending on the vintage, it deserves 5 to 10 years of aging to fully reveal itself, but it is generally easier to approach young than Taillepieds or Clos des Ducs.
FACT : The wine is in our conditioned Wine Warehouse and if you come to pick up the wine you will often also receive a nice discount. You will see the possible discount immediately if you choose Pick up on the Checkout page. We are located almost next to the Rijksweg with plenty of parking. Click here for address.
Type of Wine | Red |
---|---|
Country | France |
Region | Bourgogne |
Appellation | Volnay |
Icons | Icon France |
Grape | Pinot Noir |
Biological certified | No |
Natural wine | No |
Vegan | No |
Vintage | 2017 |
Drinking as of | 2024 |
Drinking till | 2040 |
Alcohol % | 13.5 |
Alcohol free/low | No |
Content | 0.75 ltr |
Oak aging | Yes |
Sparkling | No |
Dessert wine | No |
Closure | Cork |
Parker rating | 93 |
Vinous rating | 94 |
Parker
The Wine Advocate
RP (91-93)
Reviewed by:
William Kelley
The 2017 Volnay 1er Cru Les Champans was showing especially well, bursting with expressive aromas of rose petal, ripe wild berries, blood orange rind and dark chocolate. On the palate, the wine is medium to full-bodied, rich and textural, with a layered core of concentrated fruit, fine structuring tannins and a long finish. The suppleness of the vintage has tempered Champans' tendency to structural muscularity but not its fleshy fruit, making for a delightful gourmand wine.
The 2017 portfolio is charming, perfumed and emphatically Volnaysien at the Domaine Marquis d'Angerville, and Guillaume d'Angerville and his team should be very proud of their achievement. The suppleness and charm of the vintage at its best has tempered the muscularity of which the Domaine's more structural wines—Champans, Taillepieds and Clos des Ducs—are capable in firmer, more tight-knit vintages, but these Volnays don't lack depth or concentration. The obvious analogy is with the Domaine's 2007s. Followers of d'Angerville will be familiar with the protocol here: destemmed grapes, classical macerations and élevage in barrels of which 20% are new, older barrels generally being retained for five vintages. While the wines aren't marked by new oak, they aren't quite as backward and slow to evolve as they were in the days of Guillaume d'Angerville's father, and that will be especially true of these 2017s, wines that will in many cases deliver a great deal of pleasure in the near- and medium-term.
Published: Jan 04, 2019
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
(92-94)
Drinking Window
2022 - 2040
From: 2017 Burgundy: A Modern Classic (Jan 2019)
The 2017 Volnay Les Champans 1er Cru is tasted from two barrels. It demonstrates wonderful grace and precision with mineral-infused cranberry and wild strawberry fruit. There is a sense of vitality and sophistication here. The palate is medium-bodied with fine grain tannin. The oak is beautifully integrated, notes of orange rind and even just a subtle touch of honey towards the relatively powerful and sustained finish that just feels audacious. Wonderful.
- By Neal Martin on October 2018
Driving into the front courtyard at the domaine, I almost drive into workers busy erecting a large awning. Guillaume d’Angerville’s daughter is due to be married the following weekend and the winery is hosting the reception dinner, which begs the question, what wine do you serve with the canapés?
I tasted the 2017s with Guillaume and cellar-master François Duvivier in the cellars. “It is the first vintage since 2009 with decent volume,” d’Angerville informed me with relief in his voice. “There was no mildew pressure after a good flowering and the season was fine. We just waited for some rain at the end of August. When there was some rain on August 27 and 28, it gave us the phenolic ripeness without the dilution. We started the picking on September 3 and finished five days later in Clos des Ducs as usual, the yields around 35 to 40hl/ha.” D’Angerville also told me he is reflecting upon the percentage of new oak and whether to reduce it in the future, concerned that it can obscure terroir. Personally, I find it optimal with respect to their wines, including these 2017s, a strong set from a trouble-free growing season. Here, I always find an irresistible interplay between the sumptuousness of Volnay and the nobility of d’Angerville. D’Angerville cited the 2007 as a comparable vintage in terms of its approachable nature, though personally I find that the wines have more stuffing. The most promising wine is predictably the magnificent Clos des Ducs and also Les Champans, from a vineyard that appears to perform well this vintage.
Oh, and to answer the question, I believe guests were given a glass of Clos des Ducs at the reception.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
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Sign in to unlock professional wine reviews from world-renowned critics