Decanter Magazine - the route to all good wine

Latest issue
Subscribe
Renew online
Buy Decanter:
In the UK
In the US
Find your nearest
UK newsagent

Advertisements
Free Newsletters
Keep up to date with our FREE daily news alerts and monthly newsletters including decantertrade
Shopping Mall

Retailers
UK and Europe
Worldwide
Shopping
Property
Recruitment
Books
Accessories & Gifts
Storage & Refrigeration
Tourism

Learning Route
Free tasting kit
Links
Wine courses
Wine clubs
The basics
Wine terminology - grapes
How do they taste?
Glossary
Wine Investment
Features
2009 Harvest reports
Burgundy 2007
Bordeaux 2008
Book reviews
Am I a great vintage?
Bordeaux En Primeur
Other Features
Events reports
Events slideshows
Decanter contributors
For the facts about alcohol Drinkaware.co.uk
RSS Feed

Latest News

Gloves off as Halliday, Parker trade blows

November 29, 2005
By Felicity Carter

Australian wine writer James Halliday has launched a blistering attack on American wine critics Robert Parker and Matt Kramer.

Halliday argued Parker's Australian wine recommendations are at odds with Australia's wine show results, and that he based his recommendations on tasting 'no more than 10%' of the wines of the region.

Parker has responded by accusing Halliday and his peers of being 'Euro-imitators' and making wine to a bland formula – 'add acid, and then add more acid to denude any texture or trace of a wine's place of origin.'

Halliday made his comments in a speech last week at the annual lecture of the Wine Press Club of New South Wales, entitled Thank you Mr Evans and sorry Mr Parker.

He said the trophy results of the last six Sydney Royal Wine Shows showed that Australian judges clearly preferred wines with finesse, such as Clare Valley Rieslings, to the 'monstrous red wines so beloved of Robert Parker', from regions like the Barossa Valley.

'Sorry Mr Parker,' he said. 'Whichever way you want to look at it, the Australian show judges profoundly disagree with you.'


He suggested Parker had not tasted enough wine to make a judgement. 'I'm sure you will all appreciate our provincial nature and convict ancestry,' said Halliday, 'but it would be nice if Mr Parker would refrain from judgements based on tasting of no more than 10% of the 120 Yarra Valley wineries.'

Halliday then turned to Kramer, whom he called 'even more misguided than Robert Parker.'

He accused Kramer of suggesting that big Australian wine companies set wine show benchmarks. 'Given that just under half the entire judging complement are completely independent,' he said, 'Kramer's suggestions of big company taste fixing are farcical.'

Halliday finished with a rallying call to marketers, saying that Australia needs to promote its more sophisticated wines and persuade the world to look beyond Yellowtail. At the post-lecture dinner, industry stalwart Len Evans called on Australians to defend their wines, saying 'We have to stop being complacent. We've been too nice.'

To cheers, he added that winemakers should stop criticising Australia, saying such remarks were 'bullshit.'

Robert Parker said on his website erobertparker.com he could 'easily refute' the accusations.

'[Halliday] and most of his colleagues long ago turned their backs and palates on the true glories of Australia.'

Pulling no punches he continues, 'so many of these Euro-imitations that Halliday, [Brian] Croser et al have championed are vapid, innocuous and no better than very minor wines.'

Register on decanter.com absolutely free for news alerts delivered direct to your email inbox, and our fortnightly newsletter with advance notice of what’s coming up in Decanter magazine, offers, competitions and more.

PLUS registration is a one-stop shop for the Decanter magazine Archive and Decanter Fine Wine Tracker.

Search for similar news stories

Back to index

Advertisements
Shopping directory
Poll
Can you make fine wine over 14%?
To comment on this month's poll email editor@decanter.com

Members Log in

Username
Password
keep me signed in unless I sign out

Register free Forgot password?

Decanter worldwide

Chinese
Hungarian

Sister sites

House to Home
Country Life
Horse & Hound
The Field
Shooting UK
Homes & Gardens
Ideal Home
Yachting and Boating World
All IPC Media sites

Contact Us

Editorial...support...
sales...marketing...
Decanter media pack

Contact us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Sitemap | Trusted Reviews
© Copyright 2007 IPC Media Limited, All rights reserved