A guitar that John Lennon played on
the recording of The Beatles song Paperback Writer is expected to fetch
up to 1 million US dollars at auction.
John
gave his Gretsch 6120 guitar to his cousin, David Birch, in November
1967 - a year after the hit single was produced in April 1966 at
London's Abbey Road studios as part of the sessions for the band's
Revolver album.
Mr Birch was
given the guitar when he visited his older cousin at his Kenwood home
in Weybridge, Surrey, and he asked him if he had one that he no longer
wanted as he was trying to form his own band with friends.
His mother, Harriet, was a younger
sister of Lennon's mother, Julia, and the music legend lived near to
their family home in Woolton when he went to stay with his Aunt Mimi.
He said: "I was just cheeky enough to ask John for one of his spare guitars.
"I
had my eye on a blue Fender Stratocaster that was lying in the studio
but John suggested the Gretsch and gave it to me as we were talking."
The Gretsch was part of Lennon's collection of guitars kept in his music room at the top of the house.
After leaving the Grestsch factory in Brooklyn, New York, the guitar has had only two documented owners, Lennon and Mr Birch.
The
instrument is one of the most significant of Lennon's guitars to come
on to the market in the last 30 years, said auctioneers
TracksAuction.com.
Paperback
Writer, written by Sir Paul McCartney and Lennon, was the A-side of
their 11th single and went to number one in the UK and US charts.
The
Beatles Monthly Book magazine photographer, Leslie Bryce, took a number
of black and white and colour photos of Lennon using the Gretsch during
the Paperback Writer session on April 14, said TracksAuction.com.
One
of the photos that he took depicts the reverse of the body of Lennon's
Gretsch and shows two idiosyncratic markings in the wood grain on the
back of the main body of the instrument which are wholly peculiar to the
Gretsch 6120 serial no 53940.
In
addition, there are close-up photos from the session clearly showing
the wood grain on the front of the headstock of the guitar.
Online
bidding for the guitar, with an estimated sale price of between
£400,000 and £600,000, begins on November 14 and concludes with a live
auction at Le Meridien Hotel, Piccadilly, London, on November 23.
The
auction contains more than 100 lots of Beatles memorabilia including a
copy of the Sgt. Pepper album signed by all four members of the band,
various items from the collection of Lennon's life-long friend Pete
Shotton and the banjo played by Rod Davis in Lennon's original group,
The Quarrymen.
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