Baby I'm-a Want You is the fourth album by Bread , released in 1972. Its singles included the title cut (which reached No. 3 on the Billboard Top 100), "Everything I Own" (No. 5), "Mother Freedom" (No. 37), and "Diary" (No. 15). The album was certified Gold by the RIAA in March 1972.[ 3] This was the first Bread album to feature keyboard player Larry Knechtel .
Baby I'm-a Want You Released January 1972 Recorded 1971 Studio Sound Recorders, Los Angeles; Sound Labs, Los Angeles Genre Soft rock Length 34 :52 Label Elektra , re-released on Rhino in 1995, and in 2019 by Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs SACD-HybridProducer David Gates
Record World called "Mother Freedom" a "stylistic shift of gears" for Bread in which they "prove they can rock with the best of them."[ 4]
All tracks written by David Gates, except where noted.
Side one
"Mother Freedom" – 2:35
"Baby I'm-a Want You " – 2:31
"Down on My Knees" (James Griffin, Gates) – 2:44
"Everything I Own " – 3:07
"Nobody Like You" (Larry Knechtel, Griffin) – 3:14
"Diary " – 3:09
Side two
"Dream Lady" (Griffin, Robb Royer) – 3:22
"Daughter" – 3:23
"Games of Magic" (Griffin, Royer) – 3:10
"This Isn't What the Governmeant" – 2:27
"Just Like Yesterday" (Griffin) – 2:15
"I Don't Love You" (Griffin) – 2:49
David Gates - vocals, guitars, bass, Moog, violin
James Griffin - vocals, guitars, piano
Larry Knechtel - piano, bass, Hammond organ, harmonica, guitars, keyboards
Mike Botts - drums, percussion
Robb Royer - bass on "Mother Freedom"[ 5]
Chart (1972)
Position
US Billboard Top Popular Albums[ 10]
13
^ Baby I'm-a Want You at AllMusic
^ Rolling Stone Review
^ "Gold & Platinum: Search" . RIAA . Retrieved April 1, 2024 .
^ "Picks of the Week" (PDF) . Record World . July 10, 1971. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-04-22 .
^ "Get an exclusive sneak peek at the first-ever biography of Bread" . 13 March 2013.
^ "Top Albums/CDs - Volume 17, No. 9" (PHP) . RPM . 1971-04-15. Retrieved 2014-04-02 .
^ "Bread > Artists > Official Charts" . UK Albums Chart . Retrieved 2014-04-02 .
^ Billboard 200 - Bread Baby I'm-a Want You Chart History , Billboard.com . Retrieved April 13, 2018.
^ "Billboard Top LP's & Tape ", Billboard , March 25, 1972. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
^ "Top Popular Albums ", Billboard , December 30, 1972. p. TA-24. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
^ "American album certifications – Bread – Baby I'm-a Want You" . Recording Industry Association of America .