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The Beatles' first recording contract was signed in Hamburg, Germany,
where the band honed its craft playing gigs in the city's boisterous
nightclub district.
The 1961 recording session produced the single "My Bonnie." It was
released on the Polydor label in Germany only and never hit the top
charts. But the tune led directly to the Beatles' discovery back home, a
contract with EMI the following year and their first hit, "Love Me Do."
Heritage Auctions will auction the six-page contract in New York on
Sept. 19 for an estimated $150,000. It's the centerpiece of a Beatles
collection spanning the band's entire career. It's being sold by the
estate of Uwe Blaschke, a German graphic designer and noted Beatles
historian who died in 2010.
"Not many people know that the Beatles started their careers in
Germany," said Beatles expert Ulf Kruger. "The Beatles had their longest
stint in a club in Hamburg at the Top Ten Club. They played there three
months in a row, every night. The style they invented in Liverpool,
they cultivated in Hamburg."
"Without this contract all of the pieces wouldn't have fallen into
place," added Dean Harmeyer, Heritage's consignment director for music
memorabilia, who said the band was "a ramshackle, amateur band" when
they first went to Germany.
"They were probably a C class in the pantheon of Liverpool bands."
AP
This photo provided by Heritage Auctions from an upcoming Beatles collection sale shows the Beatles’ first recording contract, which was signed in Hamburg, Germany, where the band honed its craft performing in the city’s boisterous nightclub district.
But their stints in Hamburg between 1960 and 1962 changed that.
"It really is where they honed their musical skills to become the
Beatles," he said. "They set about learning new material, they worked on
their instrumental abilities."
But it was "crazy luck" that got them to Hamburg, he said.
Their booking agent fortuitously ran into a club owner looking for rock
`n' roll bands to perform in his Hamburg nightclub. The Beatles were
not the agent's first choice and wound up going only after other bands
declined.
When the Beatles - John, Paul, George and Pete Best - were later hired to be the backup band for
British singer/guitarist Tony Sheridan at the Top Ten Club, German
record producer Bert Kaempfert signed them and Sheridan to record a rock
`n' roll version of "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean."
"My Bonnie" netted the Beatles about $80. It was credited to "Tony
Sheridan and the Beat Boys" because Kaempfert felt the name "Beatles"
would not cut it with Germans.
"The Beatles didn't care what they were signing as long as it was for a recording contract," said Kruger.
The only copies that made it out of Germany initially were the ones
sent to the Beatles back home in Liverpool, England. After a local club
disc jockey got his hands on one and started playing it, music fans
began asking for it. That got the attention of Liverpool record shop
owner Brian Epstein, who decided to hear them perform at the Cavern
Club.
"He immediately sees their potential. He tells them `I want to manage
you and I'll make you successful'" - and he did, going on to secure them
a record contract with EMI, Harmeyer said.
"Every great collector wants their collection to be illuminative of the
subject, and Blaschke's collection does this so well largely because it
also covers the German period," he said. "It covers everything else.
He's got stuff from `Sgt. Pepper' and `Abbey Road' and the later things
... but he's got this great trove of things that are specific to
Hamburg. That's really where the story started ... it's where they
really become the Beatles."
Other highlights and their pre-sale estimates include:
- A 1962 autographed copy of "Love Me Do," the first single recorded with Ringo. $10,000.
- A 1960 postcard Ringo sent to his grandmother from Hamburg. $4,000.
- A Swiss restaurant menu card signed by the Beatles while they were filming "HELP" in 1965. $12,000.
- A set of four psychedelic posters by Richard Avedon commissioned by the German magazine Stern in 1966. Estimate: $5,000.
The auction comes on the 55th anniversary of the Beatles' first trip to
Hamburg and 50 years after the Fab Four's record-breaking performance
at Shea Stadium in Queens.
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