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| The Best of Bread | 
enlarge | Artist: Bread Label: Elektra / Wea Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $9.99 You Save: $8.99 (47%)
New (40) Used (18) from $9.43
Avg. Customer Rating: 86 reviews Sales Rank: 737
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.5
MPN: 74311 UPC: 081227431129 EAN: 0081227431129 ASIN: B00005JGA4
Release Date: June 19, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new, factory sealed. Fast shipping!
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| Tracks:
| • | Make It With You | | • | Everything I Own | | • | Diary | | • | Baby I'm-A Want You | | • | It Don't Matter To Me | | • | If | | • | Mother Freedom | | • | Down On My Knees | | • | Too Much Love | | • | Let Your Love Go | | • | Look What You've Done | | • | Truckin' | | • | The Guitar Man | | • | Aubrey | | • | The Last Time | | • | Sweet Surrender | | • | He's A Good Lad | | • | Daughter | | • | Friends And Lovers | | • | Lost Without Your Love |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com If they are to believed, David Gates and the other members of Bread never intended to become the enduring icons of a subgenre they virtually invented: soft rock. Indeed, scattered throughout this expanded edition of a perennial bestselling catalog album are tuneful evidence of their original intent, as one band mate said, "to make the '60s last a little longer." But it's the familiar, largely Gates-penned and -sung hit singles that remain the band's legacy, from "Make It with You" through the reunited band's last hurrah, "Lost Without Your Love." Though they've become oft-mocked clichés, these are singles informed with a rare, often complex melodic sense, delivered with a deceptively breezy tone by one of pop's purest tenors. Gates and Bread clearly colored artists as diverse as '80s MOR icon Christopher Cross and nouveau singer-songwriter David Mead. --Jerry McCulley
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| Customer Reviews: Read 81 more reviews...
Soft Rock Excellence October 11, 2002 101 out of 106 found this review helpful
One of the biggest problems I had with Bread was not with their music, but that my friends who liked Jethro Tull, Black Sabbath. Alice Cooper and others of various "more serious" rock genres, as did I, made fun of me any time I mentioned Bread. Well, the fact remains that I did like Bread and continue to like Bread from time to time, so much so that I own this CD.David Gates has a great voice for the maudlin music he sings. The song I think of most is "Diary", a poignant song about the fear that all of us as young males had that the girl we love loves someone else. David Gates just rips your heart out with his soft mellow words as he reveals that the writings in the diary of his girlfriend weren't in fact about himself, but another guy. Talk about a gut-wrencher. But of course the gut-wrenching emotion doesn't stop there. Here is a guy singing about himself and all of us and our dreams for the girls and women we love. "Lost Without Your Love", "Sweet Surrender", "Aubrey", "It Don't Matter to Me", "Make It With You", "Everything I Own", and more...David Gates just refuses to let you be anything other than morose about relationships. But somehow that doesn't matter. It seems like there are times when I just can't get enough of David Gates pouring out his heart, making me feel that he and I are one when it comes to how women can tear our hearts out. But that's okay, because it feels good to hear about it in David's songs. Okay, I admit that maybe you have to be a little self-destructive in listening to this music. However, it can be a little cathartic too to listen to what you feel out loud. Just don't listen to this music while you are drinking a lot, you might feel too maudlin for your own good. On the other hand, if it makes you go sing a Bread song outside the window of your girlfriend's house, or apartment, maybe it's a good thing. This CD is great stuff in small doses. Well performed mellow and soft rock, very romantic. Perfect for the right mood. I wish they still made music like this.
Interesting Collection OF Bread's Best Hits! July 25, 2002 31 out of 32 found this review helpful
Bread was likely the most improbable of seventies rock bands, one least likely to soar to the top and remain there with an unbelievable string of hits. Yet lead singer David Gates crooned his way into America's heart, and starting with "Make It With You" quickly spun off hits like "Everything I Own", "Diary", Baby I'm A Want You", "it Don't matter To Me" and "If". The trend continued with still more hits like "Look What You've Done", "Guitar Man", "Aubrey", "Sweet Surrender", and "The Last Time". All of these and more are here, including the reunited band's final hit, "Lost Without Your Love", as well as "Truckin'", "Friends And Lovers", and "Let Your Love Go". Yet as suddenly as they had materialized, so did they evaporate and disappear. Their music was formulaic but quite interesting and good, and while the material for the songs was a but limited, sometimes the lyrics were catchy and diverting, a perfect confection that Gates warbled onto the top ten list with almost monotonous regularity. And all of it is here for your listening pleasure. Enjoy!
You'll be surprised by how many songs you recognize! March 4, 2005 26 out of 27 found this review helpful
This is a great overview of music from a band that lives on through soft rock stations everywhere. Bread is known for their mellow, melodic, and often mournful tunes such as "If" and "Lost Without Your Love." At times, their songs take on a more upbeat feel (eg, "Guitar Man"), but they always retain that same soothing blend of soulful lyrics and gentle music. This is an ideal CD for listening to in your car at the end of a long work week or relaxing to at home with a glass of wine. If you recognize and like even one song on this album, buy it--you won't be disappointed.
Wonder Bread July 2, 2006 24 out of 24 found this review helpful
I kept this particular album sandwiched (no pun intended) between my Led Zeppelin, Foreigner, and ELO records in case one of my friends' accidentally pulled it out and chastised me for listening to a group that was so sappy, so mellow, and so lightweight. To the untrained ear, maybe they appeared to be that way but because I grew up in a household that not only loved and appreciated music, I respected that this was a group that turned out some extremely well-crafted music. Of course, I couldn't tell this to my "hard rock buddies" because I would like even more of a dork, but I just really secretly felt and still feel that this was a very powerful group that offered some incredible music.
I like to listen to this music when the house is all clean, when the garden has been trimmed and watered, when the warm California sun is shining through my windows and a breeze is blowing through what's left of my hair, it just makes me feel so relaxed, so calm, and so ultimately nostalgic thinking of that young boy I once was and how he got to be me.
I'm thankful for all of my influences that have helped me to become the person I now am. Whereas before I might have been embarrassed by what I liked, now I gladly and joyfully accept and embrace every single bit of good that I have been fortunate enough to have received.
May you cherish the things that have helped you to become you.
Peace & Blessings.
For Seventies Romantics November 22, 2004 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
If you are a fan of early and mid seventies soft rock, you are already a fan of "Bread". Although considered more for their chart topping ballads with `middle of the road' arrangements, they often inflected a mysterious and innocent ideology in their songs. Sometimes simple and sometimes more complex, they wrote songs that stuck in your head - whether you liked it or not. There are some memories to be had here and all of these songs were popular. It is not hard to forget the plaintive, "Everything I Own" or the wistful, "If". There are few tear-jerkers more successful than, "Diary". However, "Bread" proves to be a rocker band as well, with cuts like, "Mother Freedom" and "Down On My Knees". But "Bread" will be remembered mostly for their ballads. The other collection, "Anthology" also has twenty songs but changed four of them. These four are lesser known, other then, "London Bridge', a David Gates number that falls down along with London Bridge. Check out the song list and decide which suits your tastes - or buy both!
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