Three decades, two legacies
[Chad Gray] came up in Peoria, Illinois with
Mudvayne, then steered the groove-heavy charge of
Hellyeah during
Mudvayne's long break. This solo run frames those eras as one story, leaning on his sandpaper scream and tuneful hooks. Expect a set that nods to
L.D. 50 and
Lost and Found while tipping a cap to
Moth-era
Hellyeah. Likely anchors include
Dig,
Not Falling,
Happy?, and the slow-burn
Moth. Crowds tend to be a cross of 30- and 40-something lifers in vintage Ozzfest tees, newer heavy-music fans, and a few face-paint diehards inspired by his early-stage look. Trivia heads enjoy that [Chad Gray] once performed under the moniker Kud in
Mudvayne, and that the punchy bass intro of
Dig later sparked the brbr deng meme. Another quirk:
Hellyeah pulls in fans through shared members from legacy groove-metal acts, which colors the chant-and-groove moments. For clarity, song choices and production flourishes here are inferred from recent eras and may not match the exact plan for your stop.
What you might hear
Thirty-year tribe: Chad Gray's scene
Paint, patches, and patience
You will see black work shirts with stitched name patches, old wallet chains, and a few fans wearing thin face-paint stripes that nod to early
Mudvayne. Band tees span two decades, from
L.D. 50 to
Welcome Home by
Hellyeah, and the line for anniversary merch leans toward clean text with spiral or mask hints. In the pit, movement is assertive but watchful, with quick resets after falls and high-fives at the breaks. Between songs, chants stay short and rhythmic, often 'Chad, Chad' or the clipped brbr deng joke, while older fans swap notes about Ozzfest seasons and club nights. Phones rise for the first chorus of
Not Falling, but the room mostly saves footage for the big hits and keeps hands free to shout back. As people file out, you will hear friendly gear talk about bass bite and drum punch, plus quick comparisons of face-paint patterns from year to year.
Rituals in the roar
Grit and glue: Chad Gray's live engine
Voice like sandpaper, then silver
Chad Gray's delivery flips from clipped bark to open, vowel-rich choruses, and he manages the shift by pacing breaths between lines instead of yelling end to end. Guitars drop tune for chew and bounce, favoring tight, hammering figures over long solos so the vocals own the center. Bass often carries the hook, a habit rooted in early
Mudvayne, while the drummer sits a touch behind the beat to make grooves feel wider. Onstage, he sometimes stretches a breakdown by an extra measure or mutes instruments for a bar, creating a held breath before the crash. A quieter middle passage tends to appear, where he leans on clean tone and spoken asides, then the band nudges tempo by feel rather than a strict click. Lights chase downbeats and chorus lifts for contrast without fuss, and strobes usually ease back on reflective
Hellyeah cuts so the singing carries. One nerd note: several songs ride a step lower live than on record, easing the top scream and giving the room a comfortable high to sing.
Riffs that thump and turn
Kin of the Roar: Chad Gray's circle
If you vibe with this show
If
Mudvayne hits are your draw, their mathy grooves and elastic bass lines sit right next to
Chad Gray's solo focus. Fans of
Hellyeah will catch the same stomping mid-tempo riffs and big crowd shouts.
Slipknot overlaps through percussive vocals, paint-forward visuals, and a pit swing that favors groove over sheer speed.
Sevendust shares the clean-to-harsh blend and veteran stage warmth, keeping melody inside heavy frames.
Nothing More brings modern dynamics and dramatic drops that mirror
Chad Gray's loud-quiet-loud arcs. If those names live in your playlist, this night lands in the same lane while keeping its own voice.
Where tastes overlap