Chat Pile Bring the Heat on Cool World
The OKC noise rockers expand their sonic and subjective scope to prove just how desperate of a situation we’re all in.

On the cover of Chat Pile’s second full-length Cool World, a white cross looms over a grassy knoll. To the image’s right, emerald highway signs, traffic controllers and a lone Subaru interrupt what would be a spiritual scene and reveal it for what it is: a monument reminding passers-by on a highway interchange of who’s in charge (whether that is the Christian God or His devotees remains unresolved). It would also be a fitting image on Chat Pile’s pummeling debut album, God’s Country, a collection overflowing with malaise and alarm over noisy sludge. They wore their Korn worship as well as their Jesus Lizard and Eyehategod influence on their sleeves. Now, with Cool World, the Oklahoma quartet expands their putrid gaze from the country to the world as it burns under warfare and wildfire.
With the help of Ben Greenberg of Uniform, who has a knack for taking all things dark and imbuing in them a terrible iridescence not unlike the flames above a steel mill, Chat Pile fling the ambient anguishes of empire and decline back at listeners while switching between sonic bedlam and comprehensible melody. How they jostle between song and inferno reproduces the uncanny feeling of standing at the edge of a cliff, where pressure on the wrong foot can send you hurtling into an abyss. Chat Pile’s noise rock foundation is solid, but the band gleefully veers between sludge metal (“Milk of Human Kindness”) and noisy post-punk (“Shame”). “Frownland” is downright groovy, and without Raygun Busch’s screams on “Tape,” Chat Pile could be convincingly labeled funk-rock. They’re scholars of the aggressive metal and punk traditions of the Clinton and George W. Bush years, channeling that soup of aggression towards a vision of global rot.