Follow TV Tropes

Following

Trivia / Revocation

Go To

  • Breakthrough Hit: Great Is Our Sin. While they had steadily managed to work their way up to being a legitimate name as opposed to a perpetual support by Deathless, they still weren't particularly big by the tail end of its touring cycle. Great Is Our Sin managed to double their live draw, sold significantly more than its predecessors, and massively increased their profile overall.
  • Creator's Favorite Episode: While their favorite album changes regularly, "Witch Trials" is their favorite song to play live and one of their favorite songs in general.
  • Creator's Oddball: Chaos of Forms. Its eclectic, experimental nature and Genre Roulette tendencies make it stand out in their discography, and aside from "No Funeral" (which itself has sparse appearances), they do not play anything from it at this point in time, though the title track made a surprise appearance on their fall 2018 tour.
  • Keep Circulating the Tapes: Their only album under the name Cryptic Warning, Sanity's Aberration, which is also technically their first album, is not available to purchase on any digital music outlets, and is only obtainable if you happen to see a listing for a CD online. This will likely always be the case, as the band rarely acknowledge it, rendering a chance of a rerelease nigh impossible.
  • No Export for You: Their cover of Exhorder's "Death in Vain", which was a Japanese bonus track on Existence, as well as their cover of "Dyers Eve" on the self-titled, but that is slightly subverted insofar as the Japanese version of the self-titled was also offered in the US in very limited quantities as a preorder.
  • The Pete Best: They very briefly had a standalone vocalist for the first few weeks or so of their existence (back when they originally went by Aceldama), though his name is not currently on record.
  • Promoted Fanboy: Dan.
  • Write What You Know: "A Debt Owed to the Grave" was inspired by the time that Dave spent working in the morgue of a hospital, as his job largely entailed moving bodies down to the basement. At face value, it's about leaving payment for Charon, but it's also just as much about his realization that he essentially was a ferryman for the dead.

Top