Bread - Guitar Man -1972 - Pop- -flac 24-192- |best| Here

But Guitar Man was different. Released in August 1972, it was the band’s fifth studio album and marked a turning point. It would be the final studio album featuring the classic lineup before Griffin and Royer departed. The album is a masterclass in elegant, melancholy pop. While the title track—featuring a frantic, plucked acoustic hook that every Gen-Xer recognizes—became a Top 20 hit, the deep cuts are where the album shines. Tracks like “The Guitar Man” (not to be confused with the title track) and “Just Like Yesterday” showcase Gates’s pristine production: layered acoustic guitars, immaculate vocal harmonies, and a rhythm section that breathes.

For the collector, the keyword is not just a file name. It is a promise of sonic transparency. If you have a DAC that does justice to 24-bit depth and a speaker system that resolves 192 kHz sampling, press play on “The Guitar Man.” Turn it up until the room vibrates. Then listen to the silence after the final chord. Bread - Guitar Man -1972 - Pop- -Flac 24-192-

In 24/192 FLAC, this album stops being background music at a dentist’s office and becomes a time machine. You are transported to Elektra Sound Recorders in Los Angeles, 1972. You can hear the space between David Gates and the microphone. You feel the wood of the guitar. But Guitar Man was different