In the late 1960s, a guitarist named David Gates was well-known in the California pop scene as a session musician, singer, and producer. However, this busy schedule felt too limiting, and he decided to broaden his horizons. Together with another session musician, guitarist James Griffin, they formed a band. They called themselves Bread, and although their career was short-lived, lasting only seven years, they left behind a long list of unforgettable songs, some of which have become classics of rock. They enjoyed great success between 1970 and 1977, placing 13 songs on the Billboard Hot 100 chart during that time. They became pioneers of what would later be called Soft Rock or Melodic Rock (AOR), a style characterized by catchy melodies and lyrics that were generally uncompromising, as can be seen in one of their biggest hits: "Guitar Man". Their first album, "Bread" (1969), featured elegant, sunny Californian pop in the style of what many artists were doing at the time "California dreaming", as the song proclaimed. Gates, however, leaned more towards introspection and sentimentality than the pop/folk euphoria of his contemporaries. This led him to create a number of sophisticated ballads, which he would release in subsequent years on albums that achieved strong sales and high positions on the charts. A year later, they released their fifth album, "Guitar Man", featuring the title track, which became the group's most famous song worldwide, achieving gold certification like all their previous albums. However, it is in their compilations, such as "The Best Of" from 1973 (an album that reached five platinum records), where their power of seduction is best appreciated, giving space to the best of their entire career "If", "Make it with you", "Guitar man", "It don't matter to me", or "Everything I own", among other great songs from this legendary band.


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