No Control

Vincent Marie holding a wine glass in the No Control cellar in Volvic, Auvergne

Vincent Marie grew up in Normandy, far from any vineyard. A chance encounter with natural wines in 2003 sent him in a new direction, away from a career in sports marketing and toward the volcanic hills of Auvergne. He earned his viticulture and oenology diploma in Alsace in 2012, completing internships with Patrick Meyer and Bruno Schueller, then headed south to Volvic to start No Control.

Backstory

Marie began with 1.5 hectares he acquired in 2012 near the town of Volvic, the same town famous for its mineral water. By 2015 he had expanded to around 5 hectares by leasing Domaine de Tournoël. Along the way he co-founded an annual natural wine fair in Caen and absorbed the influence of Loire naturalists including Claude Courtois and Patrick Bouju. The name No Control captures his winemaking philosophy and, just as deliberately, his record collection.

The Region

Volvic sits in the Puy-de-Dome department of Auvergne in central France, at the foot of an ancient volcanic chain. The soils are a mix of pink basalt, feldspar, and volcanic ash. The estate's oldest vines grow at around 1,200 feet elevation on soils that have been shaped by eruptions going back millions of years. Auvergne is not a classic wine appellation; bottles are labeled Vin de France, leaving Marie free of appellation constraints.

Vineyards & Farming

The estate covers approximately 5 hectares across four plots. Varieties include Gamay d'Auvergne (the dominant planting), Pinot Noir, Syrah, Auxerrois, Chardonnay, Sauvignon, and Sylvaner. The oldest Gamay vines are 117 years old. Soils are worked manually and with a horse to minimize compaction. Farming is certified organic with biodynamic practices layered on top. Marie uses no synthetic inputs and plants cover crops between rows to support soil biology.

Winemaking

No additions. No removals. Fermentation is spontaneous, and nothing is added to the must or the wine at any stage. Some cuvees involve whole-bunch fermentation; others are partially destemmed depending on the vintage and the variety. Wines are neither filtered nor dosed with sulfur before bottling, following a strict zero-zero philosophy.

The Wines

Cuvee names read like a playlist: Magma Rock, CBGB, Tournoël Riot, Babinou, Incendie et Pillage, Rockaille Billy, and Fusion. Between five and seven cuvees are released each vintage depending on the year. The wines range from crystalline Gamay to deeper Pinot and Syrah blends, with all of them carrying the unmistakable mineral charge of volcanic Auvergne.

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