WHERE THE HOKEY POKEY "IS" WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT

Bread

On the Waters

  • AMG Review of On the Waters

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    Bread broke big with their second album, thanks to David Gates' sentimental soft pop classic, "Make It With You" -- the song that set the standard for sensitive mellow pop allads for the '70s and for years to come. Its pull is strong, but it's a bit misleading, since the group hardly just turns out a series of these lovely, luxurious pop tunes throughout the record. In fact, with the considerable assistance of Robb Royer and James Griffin, the group actually rocks it harder than Crosby Stills & Nash (if not CSNY, true enough), and they continue to show that the diversity and range of material they demonstrated on their debut was no fluke. If anything, "Make It With You" doesn't set the pace for the rest of the record, since even the softer moments, such as "Look What You've Done," isn't as lushly mellow as that -- there is more coloring through the guitars, and the songwriting has more edge and melody than that. Of course, this is hardly a hard rock record, but it's a first-class Californian pop record, one that is as blissful as a sunset when it lays back, and as incandescent as a day at the beach when the tempo is sprightly.

Living In The Past With Bread
10 months ago
Blog post image preview

Time for something pretty. Great vocals, great melody in a Macca style. If you never gave Bread much of a chance because of their soft pop top 40 singles, you have been missing some great 70's pop/rock. Not all of their stuff is MOR. They have some real innovative tracks you should hear. Perhaps I'll post some others at another time. There are a number more from this CD alone that I think most ...

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