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Followers of this producer will know that Tête du Clos is a sub-climat of Morgeot and one of this appellation’s finest sites. Here, at the apex of the vineyard—bordered by La Romanée to the north and Les Embazées to the southwest—the white soil is very rocky, giving a more mineral, tensile edge and great depth. Vincent Dancer inherited these vines in 2000 and was the first in the village to bottle the wine with the lieu-dit on the label. Dancer’s parcel was planted in 1954 and gives a brilliant ‘liquid-limestone’ expression of Tête du Clos. You can think of it as the Chassagne equivalent of Dancer’s Meursault Perrières.