12 Dec 2012
12:00 GMT
London, Knightsbridge
Entertainment Memorabilia
Entertainment Memorabilia
George Harrison / The Beatles: The iconic black leather jacket,
worn throughout early stage appearances in Hamburg, Germany and The
Cavern Club, Liverpool and for publicity material, circa 1960-1962,
with elasticated cuffs and waistband, matching facing to collar,
two angled pockets, zip fastening, inner pocket with label reading Meyer-Schüchardt Sport und Leder Hamburg Mönckebergstr. 6 Lübeck Breitestr. 37 and inscribed GEO in blue ink, size 50, together with a limited edition deluxe version of George Harrison - Living In The Material World set
Estimate:
£90,000 - 120,000
€110,000 - 150,000
US$ 140,000 - 190,000
£90,000 - 120,000
€110,000 - 150,000
US$ 140,000 - 190,000
Footnotes
- The Beatles
returned to Hamburg in the spring of 1961, for a residency at the Top
Ten Club from 1st April to the 1st July. Mark Lewisohn records in 'The
Complete Beatles Chronicle' that they appeared onstage for 503 hours
over 92 nights and that '...their stamina and musical versatility
improved dramatically as the visit wore on. When they returned to
Liverpool in July they were simply untouchable.' Pete remembers that
they were met on arrival at Hamburg station by Astrid, wearing a black
leather trouser-suit (op.cit). In 'The Beatles Anthology', George
recalls the impact the trousers had on the group and so Astrid took them
to a tailor who made them all a pair.
- Just as their collarless jackets helped define the Beatles'
image during 1963-64, so did their black leather jackets (and matching
trousers), bought whilst in Hamburg, in the pre-fame years of 1960-62.
During the group's first trip to Hamburg, August-November 1960, they became friends with a group of young Germans known as 'Exis', followers of the French philosophy of Existentialism. Amongst them were photographer Astrid Kirchherr and her boyfriend, Klaus Voormann, an artist and illustrator. They favoured black clothing, including black leather jackets and coats, and Klaus wore his hair brushed forward in a fringe, a style that was later to become the 'Beatle' haircut. Astrid was soon to fall in love with the Beatles' bass player, Stuart Sutcliffe, and the group, influenced by the Exis' clothing, began to adopt a similar look. Pete Best, in his autobiography, 'Beatle!', records that George bought a leather jacket from a waiter for £5, and Pete, Paul and John then all acquired '...cheap bomber-style models which we wore with the tightest of jeans and cowboy boots.' Apart from the considerations of fashion, there were, according to Pete, some purely pragmatic reasons for the leather: 'We had sweated so much into our other clothes on stage they were falling apart. We needed something we could play in and walk around in, live in. So we just thought, leather is what Gene Vincent wears, that's a good hard image and that was it. But when we got back to Liverpool people really started looking at us.'
The all-leather outfit remained a favourite look for the Beatles onstage throughout 1961 but after they signed a management agreement with Brian Epstein in January 1962, this was all set to change. Epstein, the dapper, well-groomed businessman, persuaded the group that in order to progress in the music business, they would have to change their 'Hamburg' look and attitude - smoking, eating and fooling around onstage - for something smarter and more professional. His suggestions met with some opposition, particularly from John, but they all eventually agreed and Epstein arranged for tailor Beno Dorn, in Birkenhead, to make them matching suits. These received their first public airing on 7th March at the Playhouse Theatre, Manchester, for the Beatles' radio debut on the BBC Light Programme's 'Teenager's Turn - Here We Go'. A month later, on 5th April, they appeared at the Cavern Club and Mark Lewisohn records that: 'For old time's sake, the group played first in their black leather outfits and then changed into their new Beno Dorn suits and ties for the second half.' (op. cit.) Never entirely comfortable with this transformation it seems, John, in a 1970 interview quoted in 'The Beatles Anthology', recalled seeing the Granada TV footage of the group in suits and ties in the Cavern in August 1962, and reflected that that was when they had, in his view, started to sell out.
Provenance: The Harrison Family Collection
George gave the jacket to his brother, Harry, in the 1960s. A photograph exists, probably taken circa 1964, of Harry wearing the jacket whilst at the wheel of the Jaguar Mk.II that George had given him. Harry's son then wore the jacket to school in the 1970s, when the tear to the back occurred and the cuffs replaced as they were extremely worn.
Lot heading
The Harrison Family Collection:
Lots 300 to 313 are all items given by George Harrison to his brother,
Harry, and other members of his family. The collection dates from the
1960s and 1970s and three items, in particular, represent important
stages in George's career as one of the leading rock musicians of the
20th Century.
Firstly, a black leather jacket comes from the period when the
newly-named, and little-known, Beatles honed their skills in the clubs
of Hamburg and Merseyside. The many hours they spent onstage, from the
latter half of 1960 through to 1962, helped hone their musical skills
and transformed them into a group poised on the brink of unimagined
international fame. Acquired in Hamburg, George wore this jacket both on
and offstage and it appears in many of the photographs taken of the
group in those formative years.
Early in 1962, manager Brian Espstein managed to persuade the group that
the only way to progress in the music business was to 'smarten'
themselves up, both in their choice of wardrobe and conduct onstage. Out
went the leather jackets and trousers and rather sober, tailored suits
became the new image. Following the group's phenomenal rise to stardom
in 1963, their new look of Pierre Cardin-inspired suits with collarless
jackets, worn with black Chelsea boots, widely influenced the clothing
adopted by the teenagers of the day. The pair of 'Beatle' boots included
in this collection are from the time when Beatlemania was at it height
and, whilst various suits worn by the Beatles in 1963-1964 have been
preserved, a pair of boots from this period are a rare survivor.
After the Beatles broke up in 1970, George embarked on a new stage in
his life as a solo artist. He got off to a flying start with the
release, in 1971, of several hit singles and the triple-album 'All
Things Must Pass'. This year also saw him, along with Ravi Shankar,
organising the Concert For Bangladesh, the first rock concert staged to
raise funds for humanitarian causes. Since the mid-1960s, George had
become deeply interested in Eastern religion and music and this was his
response to the suffering of the people of Bangladesh caused by both a
devastating tropical cyclone and the effects of civil war. The Concert
For Bangladesh was held at New York's Madison Square Garden and an
orange shirt identical to that worn by George onstage is another
highlight of the sale. Made by Nudie's of Hollywood, suppliers of
Western-style clothing to the stars, the shirt bears a label with
George's name and features the Hindu 'Om' symbol, to match those on the
white suit George also wore for the concert.
Other items in the collection reflect daily life as a Beatle, including
demo recordings, Fan Club records given away at Christmas, a camera to
record the madness surrounding the group from an insider's perspective
and publicity photographs signed by George and with signatures of the
other Beatles forged by him in an effort to keep up with the
overwhelming demand for autographs.
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