A SELECTION of items from the glory days of the original Cavern Club
is attracting attention from music fans worldwide after being put up for
auction. They include a distinctive Reslo ribbon microphone and a small piece of the original stage, both from the time of the Beatles.
But the pick of the bunch is likely to prove the Compulsory Purchase
Order for the Cavern Club from British Rail, which led to the first
club’s closure in 1973 and eventual demolition. BR were developing the Merseyrail underground loop and needed the
site of the Cavern to sink a ventilation shaft to bring fresh air into
the excavations. Ironically, the shaft was never built and the Cavern was left filled
in with rubble. It remained in an undisturbed state below a makeshift
car park until 1982 when redevelopment started, paving the way for a
re-built Cavern to open two years later. The Mathew Street cellar is the ultimate place of pilgrimage for
Beatles fans, with the Fab Four making a total of 292 appearances there
between February 1961 and August 1963. The microphone and piece of stage come from the collection of Nigel
Greenberg who opened the Cavern Sound recording studio in 1964. The purchase order is from the collection of Debbie Greenberg whose
father, Alf Geoghegan, was the owner of the club at the time the
purchase order was issued. The items are up for sale on the PFC Auctions website, with online bids closing at 7pm on September 27. Spokesperson Kylie Whitehead said: “The Cavern Club was one of the most iconic venues in popular music history. “The birthplace of The Beatles, the Cavern was where the band were
spotted by Brian Epstein who managed them until his death in 1967. We
expect these unique items to draw attention from music fans around the
world.” The Cavern first opened its doors in January 1957 as a jazz club,
but became synonymous with the early 1960s Merseybeat explosion.
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