Mega-retrospective bliss, this album from London’s Treetop Flyers, got me reminiscing…..
An expression of mixed emotions hung on my dadโs face as he sauntered past my bedroom. โWhat you listening to?โ he grumbly enquired. Heโs joined the dots between my music listening habits and his diminishing record collection, โyeah? I used to have that albumโฆ.โ
Property is theft for the anarchist, least this isnโt even theft, just relocated within the same household, and Iโd like to think, flattery and the notion his records were getting revitalised befell my father. Not my fault this was the mid-eighties, a void between creative post-punk electronica and house, when we, the youth, were fully aware the hit factories was mugging us off with a monotonous catalogue of samey bullshit. Finding good music prior to my own days was a must, and we hadnโt YouTube, we just had these treasure chests of hand-me-down records.
Everything about Treetop Flyersโ new album, Old Habits suggests I should despise it, yet nothing could be further from the truth. The divine retrospection delivered the aforementioned fond memory; close your eyes and you can see the Ronco logo revolving at 33rpm on a mahogany music centre. My mind even sees the autochanger arm hinged aside. The only gender neutrality in the seventies was hair length; ladies played singles, men albums, big, hairy men with chest rugs you could lose a prawn cocktail in. And Old Habits couldโve nested between those long-players, not looking out of place.
This is Old Habitsโ follow-up to 2018โs critically acclaimed eponymous album, which held a distinct American West Coast vibe, yet Old Habits moves away from this, guiding into the wonderous era of seventies British rock n roll pop; absorbing late mod soul, subtly hinting at psychedelia, but wallowing in Carnaby Street cool. Just like its influences, the Faces, Van Morrison, George Harrison, The Who, Ronnie Lane and Traffic, Treetop Flyers has produced a mellowed masterpiece now, which if it was recorded back then, would remain equally classic.
You will tingle akin to the saxophone riff of Gerry Raffertyโs Baker Street throughout this absolutely spellbinding journey, that much I guarantee. Treetop Flyers were formed in 2013 by frontman Reid Morrison, Laurie Sherman and Sam Beer, who met whilst playing in other projects as part of the West London folk scene. I went in blind, this is their fourth studio album, I was unaware of them, I came out the other side overwhelmed with a sense bliss.

From the off, Golden Hour, the opening track sets the scene; drumbeat retrospectively sublime, the piano and guitar combo marries, vocals enchantingly cool, and the tempo of each following tune blends into another; youโll be tingling by the second tune, Dancing Figurines, hooked by the third.
If the horn-blowing Cool Your Jets is the most upbeat and beguiling, with essences of scooter culture, Castlewood Road calibrates the whole album and brings it to an apex. Itโs dripping of Curtis Mayfield, or how youโd like a later Weller song. The theme is a street on Stoke Newington which the bandโs lead guitarist Laurie Sherman lives, and the accompanying video was shot in Laurieโs house. โThere have been many a British song about places where people lived or grew up and this is our kinda take on that,โ explains Morrison. โWe spent a lot of time there over the years writing and chatting, drinking coffee listening to records etc and Laurie actually mixed the new album (Old Habits) in that house too. So, I guess itโs a love song and thank you to those walls really.โ
After a couple of listens Iโm determine to dive deeper into this, and come out singing the songs; if you need me, Iโll be in a beige flowery shirt flowing across an oversized belt buckle, slouching in the corner of the front-room of a house party in 1976, next to the lava lamp, bellbottoms swishing, with headphones fit for Godzilla affixed, paying attention to nothing other than this absolutely gorgeous album.



Trending……
Jamsters Festival at The Southgate
January last year, The Southgate Inn Devizes announced Jamsters, a monthly Friday night platform for loose groupings and associations created at their regular jam sessionsโฆ
Ruby Darbyshire & Devizes Cafe Nero Wins Poppy Campaign Award
As if we required proof that Ruby Darbyshire is loved by all, today she was asked to play her pipes by the war veterans inโฆ
Donovan or Donoless, Fulltone Festival is a Cake Tray!
Images by Gail Foster Regretfully I must report that due to a personal issue Jason Donovan is unable to sing at Devizes’ Fulltone Festival thisโฆ
Strange Days Indeed, at The Barge on HoneyStreet
Earthlings and all other organic lifeforms with a taste for the occult, fortean and generalย weirdness are heading to The Barge at HoneyStreet the firstโฆ
Fortnightly Banking Drop-in Sessions Replaces Devizesโ Lloydsโฆ.
No smiling faces in this snap! Our MP Brian Matthew met with representatives from Lloyds Bank yesterday to raise concerns about the closure of theโฆ
โGaslightโ at The Mission Theatre, Bath, July 8th-11th 2026
by Ian Diddams images by Michael Stevens โ Pharos Photography Shakespeare is credited as having introduced around 1,700 words into the English language, and severalโฆ
Bird is The Word Caged! Trowbridge’s New Music Venue Coming Soon
It looks like fowlers have finally caught them! I mean, wildly flying around, daytime clubbing, karaoke cavorting, supporting and promoting local live music, who doesโฆ
Deadlight Dance New Single & Video
New single from our gothic duo Deadlight Dance, taken from Marchโs album Vox Populiโฆ. Second tune on the album, a ballad to the poisonous evergreenโฆ
Who’s Lovin a Devizes McDonalds and Tesco?
For what it’s worth, I’m impartial to the prospect of McDonalds, Tesco too. I’ve got viewpoints to waffle endlessly with no real conclusion, if you’veโฆ
Brian on FullTone Festival
Our regular historian and Visiting Research Fellow of The Regional History Centre, UWE Bristol, Brian Edwards takes some time to sketch the FullTone Orchestra aheadโฆ