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Trivia / Enterprise Earth

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  • Black Sheep Hit: "This Hell, My Home". It became something of a Signature Song for a while, but the band feels that it is a poor representation of where they currently are musically and have stated that they refuse to play it ever again.
  • Creative Differences: The core of why Dan left Infant Annihilator, as they apparently ripped him off and paid him far less than he was owed as per what they had agreed on once the project became an unexpected hit. This would also wind up being the reason why Dan left Enterprise Earth itself; as per Gabe, the band had reached a point where they had accepted that Dan was a huge problem on many levels, wasn't going to change, and could no longer be in the band, and he was finally asked to resign and did so willingly. While things didn't end on a great note and there was some animus at the time, Gabe also stressed that at the end of the day, he harbors no ill will towards Dan, is happy that Mire Lore is going places, and has accepted that the split was in everyone's best interest.
  • Creator Backlash: Dan does not particularly like his vocals and lyrics on Embodiment, as he apparently had to rush through the writing process and wasn't in a great headspace at the time, while Gabe has also expressed his dislike for the album on numerous occasions.
  • Refitted for Sequel:
    • Gabe Mangold originally wrote "The Failsafe Fallacy" for Delusions of Grandeur, but couldn't find a way to make it work within the context of that band and left it on the bench for almost a decade before he joined Enterprise Earth. He also originally intended for "Curse of Flesh" to be the closer on The Chosen and for "Atlas" to segue into it, but it was already an enormously long album and the song wasn't quite where he wanted it to be at that time, so he called it a day and then finished it for Death: An Anthology.
    • A substantial portion of "Casket of Rust" was written for one of Travis Worland's old projects over a decade ago and never wound up being used.
  • Role-Ending Misdemeanor: Rob Saireh was fired in late 2021 after screencaps of a sexually explicit conversation he had with a minor surfaced on Instagram.
  • Write What You Know: As per Travis Worland, Death: An Anthology was inspired by his upbringing, as he grew up in an extremely religious environment obsessed with and terrified of death and damnation, and death and the afterlife as a concept was so ingrained in him that it only made sense to explore it on a conceptual level from a secular perspective.

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