FAQ
1

What does the name mean?

elitefitrea…super weird, right?

The name is a tribute to the Deftones, and specifically their 2000 album White Pony.

Elite was borrowed from track 3, Elite.

Fitrea is an Arabic-derived Indonesian name (meaning "holy") reminiscent of White Pony’s track 1, Feiticeira.

wishing to evoke The dream-like feeling of White Pony, Diamond created the elitefitrea name very early in his music career.


FAQ
2

Do you have your song lyrics anywhere?

The lyrics to all of elitefitrea's songs can be found here.


faq
3

Why do you call it post-industrial and not just industrial?

Many years ago, when Diamond was first writing a description for the band, he looked up Nine Inch Nails' Wikipedia entry to see what their genre is called. It described them as post-industrial.

Today, there is no instance of the phrase post-industrial in the entire entry. Thus, we conclude that Wikipedia is a lying piece of shit.


FAQ
4

Why do you advertise on Twitter, facebook and instagram?

Sometimes, when bands love their music very much, they want to share it with other people who also love music .


FAQ
5

Why do you use messaging ads instead of other kinds of ads?

Actually, we do use all kinds of ads. If you saw one kind of ad or another, that was just a random thing.


FAQ
6

Why do you use a chat bot?

CULTBOT 5000™️ is the easiest way to make sure that people who message us on social media always find what they're looking for.


FAQ
7

Why can't I talk to the band directly on messenger?

It’s too much.


FAQ
8

Why don't you put your music in your ads?

We do - The music in the ads is our music. In the ads, When Diamond says, "it sounds like this," and then the ad plays snippets of our actual songs, that's the music. The songs are in the ads. They are literally right there.


FAQ
9

You should just have an ad that's music only.

We have them, you just didn’t see any.


FAQ
10

What's with the whole ‘Black Diamond’ thing?

Black Diamond is the band founder’s alternate artist name. He has two artist names. Diamond Day and Black Diamond. Diamond Day is an in-person persona. Diamond is a nice guy who only says nice things. Diamond Day is married and has friends in real life. Black Diamond is a a shit-posting curmudgeon, probably an incel or something.

Black Diamond is an homage to all the good vibe timelines that never manifested. Its origins are as follows:

  1. Diamond is a tribute to Diamond Darrel, a young musician from another era, who was filled with hope and potential. He played guitar in a glam-rock band called Pantera.

  2. There was a weird hippy song called, “Just another diamond day.”

  3. Day is Black Diamond’s surname, ergo, Diamond Day.

  4. Black is based on a quote from Peaky Blinders, "...today is a black day."

  5. Peaky Blinders once made a passing reference to Lethe, a river in hades.

  6. Lethe is an album written by black diamond.

  7. Day is Black Diamond's surname. Ergo, Black Day. thus, Black Diamond Day.

  8. Black Diamond has the initials BD, sharing them with Black Diamond’s birth name.

  9. Therefore, Black Diamond.

Special Note: Journalists should refer to Black Diamond as Black Diamond and Diamond Day as Diamond Day.

Diamond Day and Black Diamond's preferred pronouns are me/i.

Example: “Black Diamond released an album which I worked really hard on. I am working on a follow-up. In a statement, I said, “this is the best album ever,” and my beard was looking spectacular as I did so. My Dark past did not preclude my mastery of musical form, nor did it bar me from manifesting my highest potential.”

Note the curious use of the first person pronoun, “I,” by the hypothetical author in the example above. Actually, it Is not the first person pronoun. It is Black Diamond’s preferred pronoun. Due to the strange amount of butt-hurt and hatred that Black Diamond receives from total strangers, Diamond’s pronouns are an invitation to consider one's projections. By Using the preferred pronoun, “I,” filthy, lying journalists can experience the joys of taking a shred of ownership over their disgusting utterances.

To illustrate, if a journalist felt tempted to write, for instance, “Black Diamond wrote an album and he is an asshole,” that journalist would be breaking the law in several jurisdictions. By using Diamond’s preferred pronouns, “me/I,” correcting the sentence to “Black Diamond wrote an album and I am an asshole,” the journalist is addressing the performative contradiction of calling someone an asshole, which is something an asshole would do.

Thus, Diamond’s preferred pronouns, "me/I" present an opportunity reflect on hidden traits, and on one's darkest desires.