A Beatles record found languishing in a loft has sold for £77,500 at auction.
The 10-inch acetate of Till There Was You and Hello Little Girl from 1962 has been described as "a Holy Grail item".
It
was the first Beatles disc to be cut before the band broke into the
national charts and bears the writing of their manager Brian Epstein.
Omega Auctions said it was "nicely surprised" by the price paid by a Manchester man for the item.
The disc lay forgotten in the home of Les Maguire - the keyboardist in fellow Liverpool act, Gerry and the Pacemakers.
The 78 RPM record - mislabelled by Epstein as 'Til There Was You and
described as being the work of "Paul McCartney & The Beatles" - was
made at the HMV store in Oxford Street, London.
Hello Little Girl,
on the other side, was again mislabelled as Hullo Little Girl and was
described as being by "John Lennon & The Beatles".
In a bid to secure the band a recording contract, it was presented to future Beatles producer George Martin - who died earlier in March - at the EMI record label.
Maguire, 74, of Formby, Merseyside, was given the disc by Epstein in 1963, after it had been returned to him by Martin.
The record was sold at the Warrington auction, having been locked
away in Maguire's loft - where it was kept wrapped in paper for more
than 50 years.
He earlier described the record
as "a special piece", adding: "It's no good to me so I've given it to
my granddaughter, who is hoping to buy a house after passing her
accountancy exams."
Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn described it as one of the "rarest and most collectable of all Beatles records".
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