From the tasting team

Mount Langi Ghiran celebrates 40 years of Langi

By Jeni Port

18 Nov, 2024

It's been 40 years since the first vintage of Mount Langi Ghiran's Langi Shiraz. Jeni Port reflects on the iconic wine and shares notes from the anniversary tasting.

The birth year of the Langi Shiraz, the wine that gave rise to a national cool-climate shiraz phenomenon, was less than great. It was 1981.

The growing season in the lead up to vintage had been hot and dry, leaving shiraz fruit deeply affected by intense heat and drought. There was, according to insiders, 'little to write home about'.

The Grampians-based Mount Langi Ghiran Langi Shiraz, and its winemaker Trevor Mast, got over the disappointment. By the release of the 1984 vintage, wine professionals were taking notice. A 'new' form of shiraz was emerging, offering an almost 360-degree turnaround from the boldness of the dominant Aussie style, à la Barossa. Langi didn’t yell. It spoke seductively and carried a secret weapon, an often positively preposterous amount of peppery spice.

At the recent milestone tasting of 40 years of Langi Shiraz (1981–2021), the appearance of pepper and exuberant spice was just one thread to the story. Rotundone, the peppery compound, is naturally occurring and comes on late in the season, so it tends to make its mark during longer, cooler seasons.

Mount Langi Ghiran vineyardsAt the recent milestone celebration guests tasted Langi Shiraz vintages from 1981 to 2021.

“We can’t control it,” says winemaker Adam Louder. “If it’s there, I think it’s a great feature of the wine and our style, but I certainly don’t seek it out.” He adds, with an unspoken sense of emphasis, “We’re not a one trick pony, there’s a lot more to our wines.”

Contrary to his name, Louder is quiet, unassuming, a listener rather than a talker with a notable absence of ego. You have to suspect it’s the country lad in him. He grew up on his parents’ property at the base of Mount Langi Ghiran, played as a kid in the vineyard and, after getting to know Trevor Mast, was asked to do odd jobs. He worked at Best’s Wines every school holiday and started at Mount Langi as a cellar hand in 1998. After time making wine in Margaret River, he returned to Mount Langi. Sadly, Trevor Mast died in 2012. Louder took over from Ben Haines as chief winemaker in 2018.

Viticulturist Damien Sheehan is similarly laconic and relaxed, thriving in a region noted for its relative isolation between vineyards and towns, and for its self-sufficiency. He says the Grampians is a wine community that isn't obvious – it's more of a rural community. Sheehan and Louder pursue a pretty simple philosophy when it comes to Langi – pick on the tannins first, fruit second. For both, shiraz tannins have to be showing good integration from the get-go.

Adam LouderMount Langi's winemaker Adam Louder. 

For the Langi tasting, 40 years were reduced and encapsulated into just 28 representative shiraz – warts and all. “I thought it was important to show everything, hits and misses,” says Louder. No Langi was made in ’01, ’02, ’16, ’20 or ’23. With each decade, each winemaker (there have been five), each winemaking trend – from some prominent American oak until 1994 to the whole bunches until 2019 – not to mention, a new winery (1999), the arrival of the screwcap on Langi (2000), the long-running Millennium Drought (2001–2009) and the fundamental, existential changes wrought by climate and vintage, Langi shiraz has evolved.

At its essence the Langi vineyard, planted in 1969 by the Fratin brothers, who sourced pre-phylloxera shiraz cuttings from Best’s and Seppelt, brings quite a definitive style of shiraz. It is medium bodied, revels in both black and red fruits – sometimes blue – carries an entrancing perfume of Aussie bush and the land, and it often lights up in peppery spice while remaining quintessentially elegant. It also ages a treat while also being mighty delicious in its youth.

That's the style that first won hearts and minds in the 1980s. Its star has not diminished in the intervening years, but with time in the cellar, some vintages, some bottles tend to shine brighter than others.

Jeni Port's best Langi Shiraz:

1996: Still wonderfully fresh, delivering a fine elegance in ripe, blackberries, baking spices, persuasive oak and all.
1999: Solid in red hues, black cherry, plum and spices, tannins bright and fine, a wine enjoying the years.
2004: Wow! 15 per cent alcohol but it carries it well, rich, textural, spice living large including a beautiful background note of pepper.
2010: Super peppery, super good, it’s all about the balance – classic Langi still full of verve.
2012: A strong savoury, earthy, leathery, herbal vibe in full song and fruit is up to it.
2014: Effortless expression of Langi with age, aromatically lifted, ripe fruit in full control delivered with finesse.
2015: Top vintage, top wine, warm, generous, all the signature Langi markers are still very much on show. 
2018: Spice, chocolate, black and red fruits, jalapeño, pepper, a celebration of cool-climate shiraz in one upfront, joyous wine.
2019: Combines an open generosity in fruit and oak with some whole bunch herbals and structural tannins.
2021: A triumph of the triumvirate – ‘fruit-oak-tannin’ – seamless, youthful, aromatic, structural and, yes, spicy.

And what of the wine that started it all – the 1981 Langi? Happy to say, there was life. There was a tingle of black fruit hanging on, nicely surrounded in earth, tar, aniseed, chocolate notes with a quiet undercurrent of woodsy spice. Trevor Mast would have been pleased.

Note: While it is acknowledged that the first shiraz made under the Mount Langi Ghiran label was in 1979 by the Fratin brothers, it was the arrival of ex-Best’s chief winemaker Trevor Mast, as consultant winemaker, for the 1981 vintage that Langi Shiraz in its current form was made.


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