Beatle’s guitar goes under the hammer in the US

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A custom-made electric guitar played by the late John Lennon and George Harrison of the Beatles sold at a New York auction for US$408 000, said officials with the company behind the event.

Los Angeles — A custom-made electric guitar played by the late John Lennon and George Harrison of the Beatles sold at a New York auction for US$408 000, said officials with the company behind the event.

Reuters

The semi-hollow-body guitar, manufactured by the Vox company, was sold to an unidentified US buyer at the Music Icons event organised by Beverly Hills, California-based Julien’s Auctions and held at the Hard Rock Cafe in Manhattan.

Julien’s said previously it expected the guitar, which was the centerpiece of the auction to fetch between US$200 000 and US$300 000.

Harrison played the instrument, distinguished by two symmetrical flared shoulders on the upper body, while practising I Am The Walrus, and Lennon used it in a video session for the song Hello, Goodbye, according to a statement from Julien’s Auctions.

Both songs were on the Beatles’ 1967 album Magical Mystery Tour. The Vox guitar was a prototype instrument custom-built for Lennon in 1966, said Martin Nolan, executive director of Julien’s. Lennon gave the Vox guitar as a gift in 1967 to Yanni “Magic Alex” Mardas, who was the electronics engineer for the band’s Apple Records label, the auction house said.

The instrument, displayed in recent weeks at a museum in Ireland before the sale, was sold a few years ago by Christie’s Auction House for a little over US$100 000.

Nolan said the latest buyer, who sent a representative to the auction to bid on his behalf, wished to remain anonymous.

Lennon was shot and killed in New York in 1980 by a deranged fan, and Harrison died of lung cancer in Los Angeles in 2001. The surviving members of the Beatles are Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr.

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