"THINGS WILL CHANGE"-TREETOP FLYERS
"Let's go back, to the start…"
That "start" sounds kinda like, 40-years ago... a time when each of the five-guys in the band Treetop Flyers were even close to being born.
Treetop Flyers' first "official" single, "Things Will Change," sounds as if it was -- once-upon-a-time -- on the Billboard Pop Singles charts sometime during the decade of the Seventies. And it's easy to hear their California harmony-laden soft-country-folk-rock influences -- from the Byrds and Buffalo Springfield to Poco and Manassas. In fact, their group name was borrowed from a 1968 Stephen Stills' composition titled "Treetop Flyer."
When I first heard "Things Will Change," I immediately conjured-up images of the band America. (An amusing Lincoln-Kennedy juxtaposition: America was an American group -- with just one British member -- who recorded their first album in England; Treetop Flyers is a British band -- except for the one American musician -- who recorded their first album in the States.) I could also hear strong similarities to Firefall, especially in Firefall's cover of the Stills classic "It Doesn't Matter."
"Things Will Change" isn't exactly a brand new song for the guitar-based quintet. Treetop Flyers attempted a more acoustic, less polished version two-years earlier in the UK without much success. But, while recording new tunes for their recently-released first full-fledged album (The Mountain Moves), the guys decided to give the track a second chance. So glad they did. In this version you can hear the pain in Reid Morrison's soulful lead vocals, the harmonies are brighter and tighter, and you just can't beat the ascending consonance of those synchronous electric guitars.
With the folk-rock genre once again trending well, it would seem that this would be the perfect time for the Treetop Flyers to soar. And with veteran producer Noah Georgeson (Adam Green, Strokes, Ben Lee) at the controls, these guys came through with a beautiful song that some will remember as one of their old favorites while they listen to it for the first time.
That "start" sounds kinda like, 40-years ago... a time when each of the five-guys in the band Treetop Flyers were even close to being born.
Treetop Flyers' first "official" single, "Things Will Change," sounds as if it was -- once-upon-a-time -- on the Billboard Pop Singles charts sometime during the decade of the Seventies. And it's easy to hear their California harmony-laden soft-country-folk-rock influences -- from the Byrds and Buffalo Springfield to Poco and Manassas. In fact, their group name was borrowed from a 1968 Stephen Stills' composition titled "Treetop Flyer."
When I first heard "Things Will Change," I immediately conjured-up images of the band America. (An amusing Lincoln-Kennedy juxtaposition: America was an American group -- with just one British member -- who recorded their first album in England; Treetop Flyers is a British band -- except for the one American musician -- who recorded their first album in the States.) I could also hear strong similarities to Firefall, especially in Firefall's cover of the Stills classic "It Doesn't Matter."
"Things Will Change" isn't exactly a brand new song for the guitar-based quintet. Treetop Flyers attempted a more acoustic, less polished version two-years earlier in the UK without much success. But, while recording new tunes for their recently-released first full-fledged album (The Mountain Moves), the guys decided to give the track a second chance. So glad they did. In this version you can hear the pain in Reid Morrison's soulful lead vocals, the harmonies are brighter and tighter, and you just can't beat the ascending consonance of those synchronous electric guitars.
With the folk-rock genre once again trending well, it would seem that this would be the perfect time for the Treetop Flyers to soar. And with veteran producer Noah Georgeson (Adam Green, Strokes, Ben Lee) at the controls, these guys came through with a beautiful song that some will remember as one of their old favorites while they listen to it for the first time.