Review
Chat Pile
Cool World

Flenser (2024) Loren

Chat Pile – Cool World cover artwork
Chat Pile – Cool World — Flenser, 2024

The great American experiment has a wide range of experiences, but it tends to focus on the coasts. There are countless dystopian pieces of art, often culling from a Warriors-esque concept of urban grit. Chat Pile play dystopian, brutal noise-punk, but from a distinctly middle American point of view where instead of civilians shadowed under dense skylines, their anonymity instead lies in the vastness of the land around them.

I think of the band as a mood. It’s pummeling, but simultaneously hopeless. There are angry death growls and spoken word lyrics. It’s a tight concept, but it still sounds diverse. And that’s a hell of an accomplishment when you play in the noise-rock wavelength, which often tends to suffer from too much samey-ness in this humble writer’s opinion.

Cool World is the second LP from the Oklahoma City band, and it advances the band’s scope well. While some of the songs embody being emotionally lost, such as “Tape,” the majority feel abused, pained and angry. Instead of the punk rock fight-back song, Chat Pile captures a moment of bleak turmoil like a faded, grainy polaroid. As I said earlier, this is morose stuff, yet the music itself is depressingly dark. Despite its title, “Shame” has some subtle glimmers of light with brighter guitar tones that contrast with the drawled vocals, and “Funny Man” incorporates some post-punk angular guitar that offers a respite, though not a full change of mood. “No Way Out” balances a heavy beat with anxious guitar and a pointed, staccato. The song moves back and forth, up and down, but it never hits catharsis. Most records will give you that big final moment before the lights go out. Fittingly, Cool World just sort of…ends. There is no resolution, just ongoing dread. There is no way out.

8.5 / 10Loren • February 8, 2025

Chat Pile – Cool World cover artwork
Chat Pile – Cool World — Flenser, 2024

Related news

Chat Pile live at Roadburn: 2023 and 2025

Posted in Bands on April 19, 2025

The Chat Pile discography grows

Posted in Records on July 20, 2024

Agriculture returns with Living Is Easy

Posted in Records on February 6, 2024

Recently-posted album reviews

Painkiller

The Equinox
Tzadik (2025)

Painkiller sees three absolute masters of extreme music join forces. John Zorn of Naked City and a billion other projects, Mick Harris who transcended from Napalm Death drummer to illbient guru with Scorn, and producer extraordinaire Bill Laswell. Their first two records, Guts of a Virgin and Buried Secrets are strange meditations traversing between free-jazz, grindcore and dub. Still hungry … Read more

Dauber

Falling Down
Recess (2025)

The lazy approach would be to call Dauber "ex-Screaming Females," but that barely scratches the surface. If I had to pick one band to namedrop a comparison to, it would be labelmates Night Court. They play a familiar style but with a lot of quirks that set it apart from the genre standard-bearers. It's driving and energetic -- more importantly, … Read more

Aesop Rock

Black Hole Superette
Rhymesayers (2025)

Aesop Rock has a reputation for esoteric and abstract raps. It's certainly an earned reputation, but that background makes it interesting when you peel off the layers of his latest, Black Hole Superette and realize that many of these dense songs are actually about the mundane: walking the dog, cohabitation... hell, even fishkeeping. While there's a lot of day-to-day routine … Read more