VALYEAR presents: An Invitation To Chaos
A raw chronicle of trauma, survival, and the pursuit of redemption.
VALYEAR, the Toronto-based alternative/metal quartet led by Chad Valyear, returns with its sophomore album, An Invitation To Chaos, a record that balances relentless heaviness with moments of unexpected clarity. The album chronicles Chad’s turbulent journey through a life marked by trauma, substance struggles, and fractured relationships, reframing personal collapse into art. His vocal delivery cuts through the dense instrumentation with honesty and dark humor, guiding listeners through narratives of self-destruction and fleeting triumphs without offering easy resolutions.
Musically, the band leans into a groove-driven approach that blends metallic dissonance with hooks grounded in classic rock sensibilities. Geoff Wilson’s guitars shift seamlessly from jagged riffs to tense, rhythmic motifs, while Joe Petralia’s bass anchors the chaos with a persistent pulse. Mane Ribiero’s drumming is precise yet emphatic, reinforcing the album’s push-and-pull dynamic between controlled structure and emotional volatility. The production by Sean Gergory at SMG Productions frames this intensity clearly, allowing each instrument to occupy space while maintaining the record’s raw immediacy.
Lyrically, An Invitation To Chaos confronts the consequences of living in environments shaped by instability and violence, exploring the allure of destructive habits alongside the resilience required to survive them. Chad’s perspective is unflinching; he examines addiction, relational breakdowns, and inherited trauma with a voice that is both reflective and confrontational. The result is a narrative that feels lived-in and urgent, underscoring the human capacity to confront shadows and seek meaning amid disorder.
While firmly rooted in metal and alternative frameworks, the album stretches across sonic territories, hinting at blues, punk, and classic storytelling influences that inform the band’s distinct identity. An Invitation To Chaos is not a sanitized account of struggle—it is an immersive, unvarnished portrait of endurance, anchored by a band whose musical cohesion amplifies the impact of Chad’s personal revelations. VALYEAR demonstrates that heavy music can carry both visceral force and narrative depth, marking a significant step in the band’s evolution.
An Invitation To Chaos stands as a testament to survival through confrontation, a record that channels disorder into focused intensity while revealing the humanity beneath the noise.
Website https://selfmaderecordsllc-business.com/valyear
Bandcamp https://valyear.bandcamp.com/album/revolution-fear-available-on-all-streaming-sites
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/valyearband/
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/valyearband/
YouTube: https://youtu.be/iLh_I_998ZE
We also had the chance to ask the band a few questions. Keep reading for more!
How did your personal experiences shape the themes on An Invitation To Chaos?
The whole album is pretty much about my transformation, spiritual awakening and coming to terms with my mortality. It was unintentional but from start to finish the songs basically sum up my life and tell a story in between Revolution Fear and An Invitation to Chaos. Joe actually pointed it out to me. He said, "Bro..you have basically shared your journey through this album....did you realize that?"
The funny thing was is that I hadn't. I always share what is going on with me. If you ever want to know where I'm at you won't have to look too far past my lyrics.
What role does collaboration play in the band’s songwriting process?
We let each other do our thing when we come up with the songs. Geoff and Joe both have studios in their house so they trade music back and forth and get as close to finished as they can get it before they give it to me to put lyrics nd melodies to.
Then I structure it...this verse..this chorus...this many times..etc...then we bring it to rehearsal and critique it once drums are brought into the picture. With pre pro we use a drum machine just to build the skeleton. Once the drums are brought in...it starts coming to life and from there I decide how heavy or how softly I am going to sing the parts.
We are all open to critiques and suggestions and we aren't afraid to be honest. There are no egos in tbe band. As a whole we want the best song we can write. We all play other instruments enough to be able to explain an idea so we have a pretty good system and a huge respect for each other and what we bring to the table.
How do you balance heavy, aggressive sounds with moments of melody or reflection?
The song tells me what to do. I have never set out to do it a certain way. I let the music tell me what I am going to sing. I feel it has it's own life...and it guides me. For real. There is never a plan. I listen to what the guys send me...and let it speak to me.
Were there any particular influences, musical or non-musical, that guided this album?
It's funny because I have recently re-fallen in love with Deftones. I listened to them for a long time and that whole scene played out for me. I stepped back from all of that genre for a few years and they kept making albums. So I heard a track...and it reignited my love for them.
The cool thing is, they had recorded four or five albums in that time so I got to dive back in almost as though they were a new band again. So for me...I have and had been killing Deftones. Then I got Joe into them and he started killing them too. Then Geoff got onto it and the next thing you know we are all killing Deftones.
But we love so many bands. Geoff and Joe were both killing all the old Kings X albums. Mane loves the heavy stuff like Machine Head and Sepultura as I do...amongst many others. But we listen to so many different bands all the time...it's hard to not be influenced. Ya know?!
How has your approach to performing live evolved since the band’s formation?
It really hasn't. We just keep progressing and getting better. I don't mean that arrogantly at all. We work really hard to sound, on stage, the way we do on album. I think we have suceeded.
What do you hope listeners take away from this record beyond the music itself?
My message has always been the same. Stand up and get counted. Stand fearless in your beliefs. I want people to walk away identifying with what we stand for and who we are.
I want anybody who listens to us to get the same feeling I got when I first heard my favorite bands. Like Alice In Chains, Faith No More or Blind Melon. The feeling that I was no longer alone. If we could remind somebody of that, to me, that is success.