Ranked #3 of 199 2004 Shiraz  from South Australia
      
      
     
   
  
    97/100
5 Stars
    
       
      
        Huon Hooke
        A massive wine, huge and tannic, lots of oak too, but not out of balance and very much in the Grange style. High-level concentration, power, length: a high-impact wine with a huge future.
        Tasted: 09/04/2024
        Drink: 2024 to 2044
        
       
     
   
 
 
	         
            
              
                  99 Points Robert Parker
                  The 2004 vintage was outstanding in Barossa, McLaren Vale, and Magill, the regions where the grapes were sourced for the marvelous 2004 Grange. It contains 4% Cabernet Sauvignon and was aged for 16 months in 100% new American oak hogsheads. A glass-coating opaque purple color, it displays a superb nose of wood smoke, Asian spices, incense, game, blueberry, and blackberry liqueur. Medium to full-bodied, satin textured, with deeply layered, succulent blackberry, plum, and chocolate flavors, it has the structure and complexity to merit extended cellaring of a decade and more. The winery estimates a drinking curve of 2016 to 2050; I'd be a bit more conservative on the long end of the range. It will ultimately be seen as one of the great vintages of Grange. 
                  Source: Robert Parker (Robert Parker Wine Advocate) by Jay S Miller.  December, 2009
                
             
            
              
                  
98 Points James Halliday
                  Saturated purple-crimson colour; has an amazing depth to the bouquet, oak and black fruits already seamlessly woven; the longer you spend inhaling the aromas, the more you learn about the wine within, in much the same way as a Grand Cru red burgundy. The palate delivers all that the  bouquet promises, and then some; it has absolutely perfect proportions to the river of flavours running through blackberry, Satsuma plum, licorice and spice; the tannins are quite active, but totally balanced and ripe. Drink to 2054.
                  Source: James Halliday.  March, 2008
                
            
            
            
              
                  
 luke.odwyer
                  I went to one of the opening dinners put on by dan murphy's and did a comparison between 1989 and the 2004. Obviously the 2004 is very young, but the potential is very apparent. 
                  May, 2009