BreadBread
Release Date: 03/14/2007
Original Release:
1969
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 977812_CD
UPC # 664140740426
Label: Wounded Bird Records
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
1.
Dismal Day
2.
London Bridge
3.
Could I
4.
Look at Me
5.
Last Time, The
6.
Any Way You Want Me
7.
Move Over
8.
Don't Shut Me Out
9.
You Can't Measure the Cost
10.
Family Doctor
11.
It Don't Matter to Me
12.
Friends and Lovers
Performer: Bread
Engineer: Bruce Botnick Producer: Bread Distributor: Bayside Record Dist. Notes: Bread: David Gates (vocals, guitar, violin, viola, acoustic & electric piano, organ, Moog synthesizer, bass, percussion); Robb Royer (vocals, guitar, flute, recorder, acoustic & electric pianos, bass, percussion), James Griffin (vocals, guitar, percussion). Additional personnel: Jim Gordon (drums). Recorded at Elektra Sound Recorders, Los Angeles, California. Originally released on Elektra (74044). Includes liner notes by Barry Alfonso. Bread's self-titled 1969 debut is somewhat atypical, compared to its later albums. Beginning with 1970's ON THE WATERS, David Gates, Robb Royer and James Griffin (with new addition Mike Botts, who doesn't appear on this album) created a smoothly commercial blend of harmonies, folk-rock gentility, and slick studio arrangements that resulted in a seemingly endless string of hit singles. BREAD is reminiscent of the chamber-folk sound Elektra Records pioneered in the '60s--think of Judy Collins' Joshua Rifkin period--mixed with a tinge of Buffalo Springfield-style country-pop. Flute, violin, viola, and recorder are integral to the band's arrangements, and songs such as "Dismal Day" and "You Can't Measure the Cost," while effective, don't have the shiny-smooth pop surfaces of later hits like "Make it With You." BREAD is an interesting debut, particularly for those who want to hear how the band changed on its way to the charts.
The kings of 1970s soft rock, Bread was led by singer/songwriters David Gates and James Griffin. The band's mellow, highly melodic style made it a mainstay on the Top 40 and AM radio throughout the decade, with huge hits such as "If" and "Baby, I'm A-Want You." Bread split in the late 1970s, with Gates and Griffin pursuing solo careers. Gates had a solo smash with the title song for the hit film THE GOODBYE GIRL, and Griffin found success in the country-music field with the Remingtons. Any hopes of a Bread reunion were dashed when Griffin died of cancer in January 2005.
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