
The Barossa, Bottled in Stories
More than a collection of aged wines, Peter Lehmann’s Masters range captures the growers, relationships and stories that helped shape one of Australia’s great wine regions.
There are wineries shaped by place, and then there are those whose identity is so bound to a region that the two become difficult to separate. Peter Lehmann belongs firmly to the latter.
Long before “regional identity” became a marketing phrase, Peter Lehmann understood that the Barossa Valley was not simply a wine region but a community: a web of growers, families and hard-won loyalties built over generations. His now-famous “handshake” agreements with local growers—commitments honoured even in difficult years—helped preserve vineyards that might otherwise have disappeared during the industry upheavals of the 1980s. That spirit still runs through the Peter Lehmann Masters collection today.
The Masters range is, in many ways, less a suite of wines than a portrait of a life in wine. Each bottle is named after a person, partnership or moment that shaped Peter Lehmann’s story, turning the collection into a quietly personal history of the Barossa itself.
The wines, appropriately, are made for patience. Released only after significant bottle ageing (often more than five years), they arrive not as youthful statements but as fully realised expressions of time and place. Even then, many retain the structure and depth to evolve further in the cellar.
That sense of longevity feels especially apt for the Barossa, where old vines and generational knowledge remain central to the region’s identity. The Masters wines draw on fruit sourced from a network of more than 100 family growers across sub-regions including Moppa, Light Pass and Eden Valley, allowing each release to capture a slightly different facet of the landscape.
Among the standouts is Mentor Cabernet Sauvignon, a wine named in honour of Peter Lehmann’s decades spent guiding and supporting others in the industry. Crafted from low-yielding old-vine fruit, it is layered and structured without losing the generosity that defines great Barossa reds.
Wigan Riesling, meanwhile, pays tribute to former chief winemaker Andrew Wigan, whose influence helped redefine the estate’s white wines. Taut, intensely mineral and capable of remarkable ageing, it has long been regarded as one of the region’s benchmark Rieslings.
Then there is Eight Songs Shiraz, named after Peter Lehmann’s favourite musical work, Eight Songs for a Mad King. The wine offers a more restrained, textural interpretation of Shiraz, shaped by significant French oak maturation and a softer, more savoury profile than the blockbuster style often associated with the variety.
Margaret Semillon honours Peter’s wife, Margaret Lehmann, whose role in the winery’s success was foundational rather than ceremonial. Like many of Australia’s finest Semillons, it rewards patience, evolving slowly over time into something layered, complex and unexpectedly graceful.
This year, the Masters range enters a new chapter with revitalised packaging that reconnects the collection to the work of celebrated Barossa artist Rod Schubert. The refreshed labels revive artworks historically linked to the wines, reinforcing the idea that the collection has always been as much about people and place as it is about winemaking.

For Wigan, the chosen artwork references the vine that inspired the sculpture atop the Barossa Wine Show’s Perpetual Trophy. Margaret carries a painting personally selected by Margaret Lehmann herself, while Eight Songs revisits a series originally commissioned in 1996 in response to the opera that inspired the wine’s name.

The updated packaging brings those threads into sharper focus, underscoring what the Masters range has long represented: wines grounded not only in provenance, but in memory, collaboration and the particular culture of the Barossa Valley.
Which perhaps explains why the collection resonates beyond the glass itself. Increasingly, travellers are drawn to wine regions not simply for tastings but for a sense of connection to landscape and local history. The Barossa remains one of Australia’s most compelling examples — a place where growers, vineyards and stories still feel closely intertwined.
Discover the Peter Lehmann Masters collection at the Peter Lehmann Cellar Door in the Barossa Valley or online at Peter Lehmann Wines.
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