Goat Wolf Brothers
Fragrance Story
Goat by Wolf Brothers is a Leather fragrance for women and men. Goat was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Laurent Marrone. Top notes are Goat's milk, Mushroom, Truffle, Violet Leaf and Osmanthus; middle notes are Conifer, Patchouli, Cedar, Cumin and Clove; base notes are Fur, Leather, Moss, Costus, Agarwood (Oud) and Vetiver.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Laurent Marrone
Laurent Marrone is a perfumer whose work spans both niche and commercial labels. He crafted fragrances such as Brocard's Sweet Home and Chris Collins' Harlem Nights. His style often incorporates bold and contemporary accords, evident in Maison Matine's Lost in Translation.
Fragrance Notes
Goat Wolf Brothers by Wolf Brothers offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Goat Wolf Brothers embodies the distinctive style of Wolf Brothers while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Trickster Archetype: Portrait of Goat Wolf Brothers
Essence
To wear Goat Wolf Brothers is to embrace contradiction-a fragrance that mingles animalic wildness with refined complexity. The person drawn to this scent is not one to be easily categorized. They are the embodiment of the Trickster, an archetype that thrives on disruption, wit, and transformation. The Trickster does not merely exist within societal norms but dances along their edges, sometimes nudging them, other times tearing them apart.
This individual is a shapeshifter, both in thought and presentation. They reject rigid identities, preferring instead to slip between roles as effortlessly as the scent shifts from smoky leather to dark florals. Their humor is sharp, often laced with irony, and they delight in exposing hypocrisy-whether in others or themselves. They do not seek to destroy for destruction’s sake, but to reveal the absurdity beneath the surface of things.
Their philosophy is one of fluidity: life is not a fixed path but a series of experiments. They distrust dogma, whether spiritual, political, or social, and instead embrace paradox. They might quote Nietzsche’s "You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star"-not as a platitude, but as a lived truth.
Style & Aesthetic
Visually, they defy easy classification. Their wardrobe might blend vintage tailoring with streetwear, or gothic accents with minimalist lines. They enjoy textures that suggest friction-rough leather, silk that catches the light unpredictably, fabrics that feel alive against the skin. Their scent, Goat Wolf Brothers, mirrors this: it is both primal and polished, refusing to settle into a single category.
Their living space is similarly eclectic-a mix of high and low culture, where a rare first-edition book might sit beside a kitschy thrift-store find. They are drawn to art that unsettles, music that bends genres, and films that leave the viewer questioning reality.
Philosophy & Values
They prize autonomy above nearly everything else. Commitment, unless on their own terms, feels like a cage. Romantic partners are drawn to their magnetism but often frustrated by their elusiveness. They do not lie, but they omit; they do not betray, but they wander. Their relationships thrive on intellectual sparring and shared irreverence-anyone who demands conventional devotion will be disappointed.
Friendships are where they excel, provided their companions accept their mercurial nature. They are the ones who drag others into spontaneous adventures, who introduce them to obscure philosophies, who challenge their assumptions with a smirk. But their shadow looms here too: they can be emotionally evasive, using wit as a shield against vulnerability.
Shadow
Every archetype has its dark twin. For the Trickster, it is the tendency to manipulate-not out of malice, but out of boredom or a perverse curiosity. They may push boundaries too far, leaving collateral damage in their wake. Their refusal to take anything seriously can alienate those who crave depth or stability.
At their worst, they become the eternal spectator, never fully engaging, always one step removed. They risk becoming hollow, their cleverness a substitute for substance. The scent they wear, with its animalic undertones, hints at this danger: beneath the charm lies something untamed, something that could either liberate or consume.
This is a person who thrives in the in-between spaces, who finds beauty in dissonance. They are not for everyone-nor do they wish to be. Their greatest strength is their ability to see through illusions; their greatest flaw is sometimes forgetting that illusions have purpose.
To love them is to accept that they will never be pinned down. To be them is to walk a tightrope between genius and self-sabotage. And in the end, perhaps that is exactly how they prefer it.