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Chat Pile - Cool World (Highlighter Yellow Color) Vinyl LP

Regular price $30.00

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Album Facts

Chat Pile - Cool World (Highlighter Yellow Color) Vinyl LP

The newest from Oklahoma City's noise rock quarter

Price $30.00
Format 1xLP
Label Flenser
UPC 657628445937
Color Highlighter Yellow
Year October 11 2024
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint

Album Facts

The newest from Oklahoma City's noise rock quarter

Price $30.00
Format 1xLP
Label Flenser
UPC 657628445937
Color Highlighter Yellow
Year October 11 2024
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint

Like the towering mounds of toxic waste from which it gets it's namesake, the music of Oklahoma City noise rock quartet Chat Pile is a suffocating, grotesque embodiment of the existential anguish that has defined the 21st Century. It figures that a band with this abrasive, unrelenting, and outlandish of a sound has stuck as strong of a chord as it has. Dread has replaced the American dream, and Chat Pile's music is a poignant reminder of that shift-a portrait of an American rock band molded by a society defined by it's cold and cruel power systems.

Though very much on-brand with Chat Pile's signature flavor of cacophonous, sludgy noise rock, the band's shift to a global thematic focus on Cool World not only compliments the broader experimentations it employs with their songwriting but also how they dissect the album's core theme of violence. Melded into the band's twisted foundational sound are traces of other eclectic genre stylings, with examples of gazy, goth-tinged dirges to abrasive yet anthemic alt/indie-esque hooks and off-kilter metal grooves only scratching the surface of what can be heard in the album's ten tracks. Besides stylistically stretching the boundaries of the Chat Pile sound, Cool World is also the band's first record to have someone else handle mixing duties, with Ben Greenberg (Uniform) capturing and further amplifying the quartet's unmistakably outsider and folk-art edge. While Chat Pile's debut album was plenty disturbing with it's B-movie-inspired interpretation of a "real American horror story", what the band depicts on Cool World is unsettling not just from it's visceral noise rock onslaught, but from depicting how all sorts of atrocities are pretty much standard parts of modern existence. In film terms, think something like a Criterion arthouse film by way of schlocky grindhouse splatterfest: undeniably gratuitous and thrilling in the moment but leaving a looming dread in the back of one's mind for how close the horrors depicted mirror reality.

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