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IMPERMANENCE

Dominic Sanderson

Eclectic Prog


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Dominic Sanderson Impermanence album cover
4.11 | 35 ratings | 4 reviews | 31% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

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Studio Album, released in 2023

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. I Don't Think I Can Get over This After All (3:44)
2. The Twisted Hand of Fate (5:08)
3. This Night and the Wounds It Will Bring (4:42)
4. Is There Calm Amongst This Chaos? (6:11)
5. An Empty Room (3:14)
6. A False Sense of Promise (4:51)
7. Like Shards of Glass Falling Through My Fingers (19:51)

Total Time 47:41

Line-up / Musicians

- Dominic Sanderson / electric & acoustic guitars, vocals, Mellotron

With:
- Tristan Apperley / bass, Hammond organ, Mellotron, synthesizers, keyboards, violin, viola
- Jacob Hackett / drums, congas, percussion, backing vocals
- Aaron Butterworth / cello, Mellotron
- Tyler Swindley / piano
- Joshua Joyner / synthesizers
- Dan Ratcliffe / violin
- Abi Clark / flute
- Beatrice Overend / baritone saxophone

Releases information

Cover: Matthew Sanderson
Format: CD, Digital
February 25, 2023

Thanks to Nogbad_The_Bad for the addition
and to mbzr48 & projeKct for the last updates
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Buy DOMINIC SANDERSON Impermanence Music



DOMINIC SANDERSON Impermanence ratings distribution


4.11
(35 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(31%)
31%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(46%)
46%
Good, but non-essential (17%)
17%
Collectors/fans only (6%)
6%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

DOMINIC SANDERSON Impermanence reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
4 stars English newbie progger DOMINIC SANDERSON is a fine example of a younger crowd of a new generation finding great inspiration in the prog legacies of the past not to mention some of the newer kids on the block. While prog artists are a dime a dozen these days with many excellent albums coming out monthly, it's always a pleasant surprise to hear a twenty-something musician release something so haunting and captivating, something that echoes the past while sounding perfectly grounded in the contemporary world of high tech production and interesting deviations from the established paradigms.

IMPERMANENCE is SANDERSON's debut release and like the title implies features an eclectic array of sounds and styles to back it up. While clearly steeped in the prog 70s retro scene, SANDERSON has borrowed many tones and textures from bands like Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Yes, Marillion along with the newer retro players in the form of Anglagard, Antekdoten and Porcupine Tree only there's no accusing him of being a carbon copy of any of the aforementioned prog bigwigs but rather SANDERSON displays a firm command of tackling this visionary fusion into a bonafide cauldron of 21st century prog splendor.

The album is a journey through many shapeshifting moods and head spaces. "I Don't Think I Can Get Over This After All" starts it all in a folk inspired melancholy which mistakenly leads one to believe that the album is going to be a total mellow slow burner but in no time the darkness descends with a lugubrious piano run and fluttering flutes with totally different melodic counterpoints overshadowing the primary vocal hooks. It's at this point where it's obvious Steven Wilson and his Porcupine Tree projects were a key player in the inspiration department but wait! There's more!

While the opening track was somewhat of a tone setter, "The Twisted Hand of Fate" makes it clear that SANDERSON is no one trick pony and immediately morphs into a more guitar based King Crimson "Red" era style only just a smidge shy of an energetic display that would qualify as prog metal. The nebulous twists and turns of quite and louder passages with nice contrapuntal excesses gets my interest immediately despite a rather sleepy intro track. "This Night and the Wounds It Will Bring" seems to take us into a sort of early Wobbler sound as it meanders around in a spaced out Pink Floyd rock sound only with extra helpings of symphonic keyboard heft. "Is There Calm Amongst This Chaos?" picks up the speed big time with some extra chunky riffs that at this pint clearly do reach the thundering bravado of fully fueled prog metal only laced with brutal prog time signature punches but cedes to a mellower downer sound.

"An Empty Room" is basically an orchestrated classical guitar piece followed by " A False Sense of Promise" which is really nothing more than a continuation. Here we get more Floydian references in Porcupine Tree mode which sustain the entire near five minutes of playing time. The best of the album is saved for last with the closing near 20-minute sprawler "Like Shards of Glass Falling Through My Fingers" which borrows heavily from the classic Yes area only tinged with jazz-chord excursions, mopey vocal performances and proggier than thous excesses which in my case is a true plus. The beauty of this grand finale is the nice controlled meandering through all ki nds of familiar prog turf only on SANDERSON's own terms.

Excellent beginning however if i had to complain about something it would be that there is way too much mellow spaced out time and not enough rocking parts for my own tastes but if you accept the album on its own terms then there is no doubt that this debut was a work of passion as there are really no bad moments on this album however like many modern prog acts perhaps a bit too much time spent worshipping the past rather than on innovative modern interpretations. Still a solid 4 stars.

Review by BrufordFreak
COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Word is getting out: there are a lot of young artists emerging into the Prog Scene and this young man, Dominic Sanderson, is a force to be reckoned with! Dominic is reportedly a resident of the West Yorkshire town of Wakefield, outside which Yorkist progenitor and next-in-line to the throne, Richard of York (father of the soon-to-be Edward IV), met with his demise in 1460 during a skirmish outside Sandal Magna castle when he and his small band were confronted by Margaret of Anjou's Lancastrian forces during the Wars of the Roses. The reverberations of this battle are being felt to this day, as evidenced by this album of powerful progressive rock music.

1. "I Don't Think I Can Get over This After All" (3:44) beautiful "little" Steven Wilson-like opener has some wonderful elements in its rather simplistic construction. (9/10)

2. "The Twisted Hand of Fate" (5:08) an instrumental that opens with a multi-track Crimsonian "Discipline"-like weave before abrasive rock guitars and syncopated drum pattern rocket in. Chunky bass guitar leads up front and center in the second pass through the "Discipline" weave--even when radio-treated British male whispers his prophetic warning. But then the band switches into a SABBATH/VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR motif with a flourish of some GENTLE GIANT-like vocals before settling into a heavier STEVEN WILSON-like . Nice drumming from Jacob Hackett but Tristan Apperley's malevolent bass is the real show-stealer. Like the VDGG finish, too. (8.875/10)

3. "This Night and the Wounds It Will Bring" (4:42) more fresh-sounding PINK FLOYD/1990s PORCUPINE TREE-like music that comes across as more like THE PINEAPPLE THIEF the longer the song goes. Excellent guitar solo over some very prog symphonic stuff for the final 90 seconds. (8.875/10)

4. "Is There Calm Amongst This Chaos?" (6:11) here's the song on which the ÂNGLAGÅRD influence comes shining through--the first 1:25, that is. Well done but it leaves me asking how much more Änglagård do we need? The second motif is not far off of some of the Swedish band's mellow motifs with its Mellotron-drenched support and delicate cymbal and flute play. I think what I like most about this song are the unexpected and unconventional chord progressions. Then there is that wonderful DAAL-like fourth minute that, following the Italian band's roots, turns heavy RPI over the next minute. At 5:10 Dominic's Damon Waitkus-like treated vocal provides a little respite from the forceful music--but only briefly, as the song ends with a true Änglagard/DAAL finale. (8.875/10)

5. "An Empty Room" (3:14) an impressive acoustic guitar solo in the vein of guitar-master ANTHONY PHILLIPS is only touched by piano and Mellotron in the final 45 seconds. (9/10)

6. "A False Sense of Promise" (4:51) what opens feeling like a continuation of the previous song becomes more of a liturginous choral piece with multiple vocals chanting their lyrics over some very simple, ephemeral instrumental accompaniment. Quite reminiscent of the more pastoral ADVENT approach to Gentle Giant. (9/10)

7. "Like Shards of Glass Falling Through My Fingers" (19:51) again ADVENT or MOON SAFARI are the bands that come to mind as I listen to the church-organ-drenched opening three minutes of this majestic, church-like sound. Even when it moves into bombastic organ-dominated prog there remains a church feel to it. During the middle ten minutes I hear elements that remind me of RICHARD WRIGHT VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR, NEKTAR, CHRIS SQUIRE, DAIMON WAIKUS, the breathy vocals I've heard a lot in KING GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD songs over the past decade, early YES, and PINK FLOYD, but most of all I hear the influence of STEVEN WILSON. Starting at 12-minute mark we move into heavier motif that reminds me very much of both ÂNGLAGÅRD and DAAL (to continue a pattern)Then, after the thunder storm interlude, we go to a lighter motif that reminds me of totally of ANTHONY PHILLIPS' "Sleepfall: The Geese Fly West" that eventually builds with electric guitar solo culminating in a powerful finale, that is, to my ears, all ROYE ALBRIGHTON. (Cue "Always" from Roy's Christian-era Nektar revival period album, Evolution.) Brilliant epic construct--very refreshing and unique if, at times, somewhat derivative. (36/40)

Total Time 47:41

Yes, I can corroborate: There's a new progster on the scene and his name is Dominic Sanderson! The man has all the chops, all the compositional genius to be a real force in Prog World. I only hope his esteemed presence is not mirrored by the title of his debut album!

B+/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece collection of refreshing progressive rock songs, all intricately constructed and performed using great sound engineering. This young man will be a force to be reckoned with for a long time (should he choose to stay in the domain).

Latest members reviews

4 stars For the last three years, my album of the year has been a debut record (Moura's self-titled in 2020, Papangu's Holoceno in 2021, and The Mighty Orchid King's Mycelium Music Vol. 1 in 2022). It's a bit of a strange coincidence. So far this year, I've found some good debut records, but none are quite ... (read more)

Report this review (#2944308) | Posted by TheEliteExtremophile | Monday, August 7, 2023 | Review Permanlink

5 stars first full length album release from Dominic,with assistance from some very fine musicians.Obvious influences are King Crimson Red-Era,Steven Wilson,and the album is steeped in 70s classic Progressive Rock. Track 1 has acoustic guitar and some lovely flute playing with violins -a great introducti ... (read more)

Report this review (#2943089) | Posted by daisy1 | Sunday, July 30, 2023 | Review Permanlink

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