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Six Years Home

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Six Years Home
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 4, 2009
Recorded2009, at The Antimatter Studio, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
GenrePost-hardcore
Length35:11
LabelStandBy
ProducerDaniele Brian Autore
Hopes Die Last chronology
Your Face Down Now
(2007)
Six Years Home
(2009)
Trust No One
(2012)
Singles from Six Years Home
  1. "Some Like It Cold"
    Released: November 9, 2009[1]
  2. "Johnny's Light Sucks"
    Released: October 26, 2011[2]

Six Years Home is the debut studio album by Italian post-hardcore band Hopes Die Last. It was released on August 4, 2009, through Standby Records. It includes a re-recorded version of "Call Me Sick Boy" from their EP Your Face Down Now, and nine other tracks.

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleLength
1."Some Like It Cold"4:01
2."Ever The Same, And Always Will Be"3:38
3."Call Me Sick Boy"3:41
4."An Endless Serenade"1:43
5."Under This Red Sky"4:17
6."Good Mourning, Honey"3:38
7."Consider Me Alive"3:24
8."Stuck Inside My Head"3:37
9."Johnny's Light Sucks"4:10
10."Six Years Home"4:22
Total length:35:11

Personnel

[edit]

Six Year Home album personnel as listed on Allmusic.[3]

Hopes Die Last
  • Daniele Tofani - unclean vocals
  • Marco Mantovani - lead guitar, backing vocals
  • Luigi Magliocca - rhythm guitar
  • Marco "Becko" Calanca - bass, clean vocals, keyboard, programming
  • Ivan Panella - drums, percussion
Composers[4]
  • Daniele Tofani - composer on Consider Me Alive
  • Marco Mantovani - composer on all songs except Consider Me Alive
  • Jacopo Iannariello - composer on Good Mourning, Honey (Former guitarist, 2004–2008)
Production
  • Produced, mixed, additional keyboard, programming & vocals by Daniele Brian Autore
  • Engineered & mastered by Vincenzo Mario Cristi

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Hopes Die Last - Some Like It Cold - official video". YouTube. 2009-11-09. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
  2. ^ "Hopes die Last - "Johnny's Light Sucks" Standby Records". YouTube.
  3. ^ "Six Year Home – Credits". Allmusic. Retrieved January 5, 2011.
  4. ^ "Six Years Home - Hopes Die Last". AllMusic. 2009-08-04. Retrieved 2012-03-09.