A classic guitar used by John, during the recording for Paperback Writer, in 1966, failed to sell at auction when it did not reach its £400,000 reserve.
Bids
for the Gretsch 6120 Chet Atkins Nashville model hollow body guitar
reached £380,000 at Le Méridien Hotel, in Piccadilly, London.
It
is now hoped a private sale can be arranged, according to the managing
director of TracksAuction.com Paul Wane, who said it had been mainly
private collectors bidding for the guitar.
Mr Wane said: “It didn’t reach its reserve, which was £400,000.”
The
guitar, which had been the star of the auction and had been predicted
to sell for between £400,000 and £600,000, was given to John’s cousin,
David Birch, when he visited the Lennons in their Weybridge home in late
1967.
According
to the auction description, David had asked his famous relative if he
had a guitar that he no longer wanted as he was trying to get a group
together with some mates at the time.
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 and gave me the Gretsch while we were talking.”
The Gretsch 6120, serial number 53940, has been owned by David Birch ever since.
The
auctioneers say that guitars owned and played by John from the
Beatles period are extremely rare in themselves “but a Lennon-owned
guitar which has the history of a close family connection,
unquestionable legal title and clear-cut picture identification is rare
beyond belief”.
David had previously loaned the Gretsch guitar to
The Beatles Story in 2010, and later to the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame
in Cleveland, Ohio, in 2012.
The guitar was used at the time the
Beatles were recording Paperback Writer, which was the fourth track
recorded at the Revolver sessions at EMI’s studios, in Abbey Road.
Mr Wane said the guitar could still be sold, and added: “There might be a private sale following the auction.”
However,
Mr Wayne said other items had sold well, including an early edition of
Merseybeat which said was sold for “an incredible” £9,000.
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