The Song “All My Days” by Chad Nathan
https://chadnathan.bandcamp.com/track/all-my-days
Chad Avery Nathan is an independent American artist born December 31, 2001, in Summerville and raised in Walterboro, South Carolina, who has built a highly prolific, self-directed creative career spanning music production, songwriting, poetry, photography, authorship, and digital media, beginning as a teenager freestyling and recording on a phone before uploading early material around 2015–2016, pausing, then returning in 2021 with a more focused, spiritually grounded approach rooted in lo-fi, hip-hop, ambient, trap, and cinematic styles, often blending instrumentals, spoken word, and introspective vocals, and since releasing thousands of tracks while remaining entirely independent without major industry recognition, live performances, or awards, instead funding his work through regular employment and prioritizing consistency, autonomy, and long-term legacy over virality or commercial success, with a creative identity deeply shaped by early exposure to classic soul, R&B, pop, and gospel through his family, and unified by recurring themes of Christian faith, worship, loneliness, purpose, heartbreak, self-reflection, and a desire to help others feel less alone, as his output extends beyond music into books, essays, journaling concepts, photography collections, and ongoing written reflections that function as emotional documentation and spiritual testimony, alongside various self-run labels and media projects, including podcasting, motivational content, and experimental video series, all reflecting an ethos of “servant-creator” where art is viewed as both personal catharsis and an offering to God, with his work frequently exploring Southern life, memory, and identity while consciously aiming to create a vast, enduring body of work he believes may only be fully appreciated after his lifetime, positioning himself less as a conventional entertainer and more as a documentarian of inner experience, driven by discipline, solitude, and faith rather than external validation or mainstream success.