Nate Goyette has described his music as “fitting somewhere between folk, punk, and a sophomore year creative writing class” and it's easy to tell why. Energetic yet introspective, somber yet hopeful, his music is for those who think as much as they feel; something he attests to growing up in a town with as many bars as there are churches.
In response to these sacred and secular influences, Nate began writing songs as a way to make sense of where he comes from and where he fits in all of it. Suffused with images of dead-end jobs, dead-end friends, and those moments you have to grow up (or at least know you're supposed to), his music can be compared to the work of Brian Fallon, John K. Samson, and The Replacements.