Hints of resin, vanilla, and spice from its one-third new wood mark the Lignier 2008 Chambolle-Musigny Bussieres (now labeled with its vineyard name, although the village wine has always come from that site), but there is also a distinctive note of holly berry that nicely compliments fresh red currant and red raspberry fruit. While refreshing in an almost white wine way, this displays a good sense of stuffing, even viscosity. It may have settled down to a more integrated performance in bottle, and I would expect it to hold up well for at least 4-5 years.
Hubert and Laurent Lignier – for more on whose recent evolution as a domaine and as negociants, consult my report in issue 186 – had one barrel from 2008 still stuck in malo last February, and several others had only finished by Christmas. No wines had been bottled (though they were assembled) when I last tasted them in February; indeed even the 2007s here were not bottled until May and June of 2009. Natural alcohol in the 2008 collection peaked at 13% in the Charmes and Combottes (due to extreme millerandage there, notes Laurent Lignier) and all of the wines were very lightly-chaptalized. Sorting was much less arduous for them in 2008 than 2007, he adds. As is evident from my rating, the array of wines from lesser locations or that incorporate purchased fruit have not (in the years since the splitting-up of control over this estate) nearly approached the consistently outstanding quality that the three or four top Lignier bottlings continue to exhibit.
Importer: Rosenthal Wine Merchant, Pine Plains, NY; tel. (800) 910-1990