John was frustrated by the hellraising pair's behaviour in the studio they
all shared in Los Angeles in the early 1970s. He complained to famed producer Phil Spector, who he was working with at the time, and titled the note 'A matter of pee'.
In it, John stated that Capitol Records wanted to evict the three of them for using their studio as a public toilet.
He
said he couldn't be expected to 'mind adult rock stars' and warned he
was about to join rival recording studios Record Plant because of the
aggravation.
The note, written in red felt tip pen on lined paper, was later given by Lennon to American session guitarist Jesse Ed Davis.
Davis provided lead guitar for Lennon's album 'Wall and Bridges' in 1974 and 'Rock and Roll' in 1975.
The
note had a pre-sale estimate of£4,000-£6,000 but the price for piece of
rock 'n' roll memorabilia soared to seven times its estimate.
A private buyer snapped it up for almost 53,000.
Louise
Cooper, from London-based Cooper Owen Music Media Auctions, said: "This
price reflects the fact that it has never been on the market before and
refers to so many famous people of the time.
"Clearly
John Lennon was blaming Keith and Harry for urinating on the console,
and he also announces that he is about to leave the record company.
"It dates from an interesting time in Lennon's life around the infamous 'Lost Weekend' period.
"In it he seems quite irritated, especially when he says he can't be expected to 'mind adult rock stars'.
"The
sale saw fans and dealers bid against each other and push the price to
well above what was expected." In the letter, Lennon wrote: "Phil -
Should you not yet know it was Harry and Keith who p****d on the
console.
"Jerry now wants to evict us or that's what Capitol tells us. Anyway tell him to bill Capitol for the damage if any.
"I can't be expected to mind adult rock stars nor can May (May Pang) besides she works for me not A+M.
"I'm about to p**s off to Record Plant because of this crap."
Record Plant in New York was where Lennon was recording when he was shot dead in 1980.
Keith Moon, the drummer for The Who, and singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson, both had reputations for hellraising.
Indeed, Lennon and Nilsson were sometimes as bad as each other.
They
were famously ejected from the Troubadour nightclub in West Hollywood
for drunken heckling of comedy duo the Smothers Brothers.
Moon
was renowned for blowing up toilets and TV sets and in 1978 died in
Nilsson's London flat after overdosing on pills meant to curb his
alcoholism.
The letter was alongside
several doodle drawings by Lennon that include is a self-portrait with
Nilsson and Jesse Davis sitting on the Palm Springs tram.
Lennon
has initialled it and dated it '79'. Yoko Ono has also signed the back.
It had an estimate of 800 pounds but sold for 6,700 pounds.
A
Lennon cartoon of a mountainous scene with seated figures, Japanese
symbols and various puns and witticisms, made 4,600 pounds.
An original acetate sleeve with doodles and drawings by Lennon in 1974 sold for 12,200 pounds.
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