Remember David Gates, Who Led the '70s Group Bread? - Best Classic Bands (2025)

FEATURES:Spotlight Featureby Best Classic Bands StaffDavid Gates is at far RIf you were listening to Top 40 radio in the U.S. throughout the ’70s, chances are you’d hear a song by the band with the bland name Bread. The group, fronted by David Gates, their songwriter, producer and primary guitarist and vocalist, earned six Top 10 singles on the Hot 100 including the soft-rock favorites “Baby I’m-a Want You,” “If” and the 1970 #1 hit, “Make It With You.”Gates, a multi-instrumentalist who also played keyboards and percussion, founded the popular group in Los Angeles in 1968 as a vehicle for singing his own songs.

FEATURES:Spotlight Feature

by Best Classic Bands Staff

Remember David Gates, Who Led the '70s Group Bread? - Best Classic Bands (1)

David Gates is at far R

If you were listening to Top 40 radio in the U.S. throughout the ’70s, chances are you’d hear a song by the band with the bland name Bread. The group, fronted by David Gates, their songwriter, producer and primary guitarist and vocalist, earned six Top 10 singles on the Hot 100 including the soft-rock favorites “Baby I’m-a Want You,” “If” and the 1970 #1 hit, “Make It With You.”

Gates, a multi-instrumentalist who also played keyboards and percussion, founded the popular group in Los Angeles in 1968 as a vehicle for singing his own songs. He wrote most of their trademark hits including “The Guitar Man,” “It Don’t Matter To Me” and “Lost Without Your Love.”

Gates was born December 11, 1940, the son of musicians in Tulsa, Okla. His first band, the Accents, included a piano player, Claude Russell Bridges, who later changed his name to Leon Russell. Gates received his first break when the band performed with Chuck Berry. Gates married his high school sweetheart, Jo Rita, in 1959.See AlsoBread - Lost Without Your Love LyricsBread - Lost Without Your Love Lyrics

In 1961, the family moved to Los Angeles, where Gates pursued a career in music, initially working as a studio musician and writing songs. His first significant songwriting accomplishment arrived in early 1964 when the Murmaids earned a #3 single with his song, “Popsicles and Icicles.” As the decade continued, Gates released several singles on his own and collaborated with many stars, including Elvis Presley and Bobby Darin.

In 1968, he teamed with Robb Royer and Jimmy Griffin to form Bread and soon signed with Elektra Records, their home throughout their career. Their 1969 self-titled debut, recorded with session drummers Jim Gordon and Ron Edgar, was a modest success. Later that year, Mike Botts joined as their permanent drummer.

Their second album became a legitimate success, reaching #12 in the U.S., thanks to the ballad “Make It With You,” which topped the pop singles chart in 1970.

Remember David Gates, Who Led the '70s Group Bread? - Best Classic Bands (2)

This dull as dishwater ad in the June 27, 1970 issue of Record World didn’t do much to offer a face behind the music

A song from their first album, “It Don’t Matter To Me,” was re-recorded and also became a significant hit, reaching #10. In 1971, Royer departed and was replaced by Larry Knechtel, a member of the Los Angeles-based studio musicians collective The Wrecking Crew.

Bread recorded six studio albums, five of which went gold. Their 1972 release, Baby I’m-A Want You, was one of the year’s top sellers, alongside such rock superstars as Led Zeppelin, Elton John and Rod Stewart. A March 1973 compilation album, The Best of Bread, has been certified 5x platinum. The group initially disbanded that year but reunited several times later that decade. Bread’s career neatly parallels America and the Carpenters, other soft-rock groups of that era.

Remember David Gates, Who Led the '70s Group Bread? - Best Classic Bands (3)

This ad for The Best of Bread appeared in the March 31, 1973 issue of Record World

As a solo artist, Gates charted many singles. His biggest was the top 15 title track to the 1977 romantic comedy-drama The Goodbye Girl.

Gates was joined on a reunion tour in 1996-97 by Griffin, Botts and Knechtel. He retired, thanks to the, er, bread from his royalties, to become a rancher in northern California. “I really did drop out and really wanted to do it… to jump right in and do a complete job as a cattle rancher,” he told an interviewer in 2003. “It took five or six years to accomplish the goals I set for myself. I couldn’t do music at the same time.

“My records are still being played around the world and maybe they are somewhat timeless in that you can hear them over and over and not get tired of them. And there’s no one writing anything quite like that now.”

Gates and Royer are the sole surviving members from their heyday. Bread’s Best of album is available here.

Related: Listings for 100s of classic rock tours

  • About
  • Latest Posts

Best Classic Bands Staff

The BCB team brings you the latest Breaking News, Contests, On This Day rock history stories, Classic Videos, retro-Charts and more.

Latest posts by Best Classic Bands Staff (see all)

  • Radio Hits of January 1965: British Invasion - 01/03/2025
  • Butch Cassidy, ‘Raindrops,’ and the Bicycle Scene - 01/03/2025
  • Wayne Osmond of Family Singing Group, the Osmonds, Dies - 01/02/2025

推荐阅读