ofner Club 40 hollow-body, fawn colored electric
1959:
Hofner
Club 40 hollow-body, fawn colored electric (vintage unknown):
Although McCartney says in an interview that Lennon and Harrison both bought
Club 40s in Hamburg, a photo taken in the autumn of 1959 -- months before
their first Hamburg trip -- shows Lennon playing his Club 40 at Liverpool's
Casbah Club. In his book Beatles
gear, Andy Babiuk cleverly researched the origins of this guitar.
Apparently, the guitar "Guaranteed Not to Split" had suffered some damage,
so the day before that Casbah gig, Aunt Mimi, after considerable pleading,
had taken Lennon to Hessy's music store in Liverpool and plunked down a
£17 deposit on this guitar and co-signed for it. Its total
price, with hire-purchase charges, was about £30. Lennon made
sporadic payments, and at one point Hessy's account ledger notes "Son in
Germany -- mother paying." He played this guitar -- his first electric
-- until buying a Rickenbacker in Hamburg the following year. He
then loaned this Hofner to McCartney, who restrung it lefty and used it
until Lennon sold it, in his words, "at a profit." Where is this
guitar now? People of Hamburg, check your attics!
The Star Club 40 re-issue
prototype, right, is authentic except for the control panel and machine
heads, but production plans are on hold. Named for the Star Club,
a Hamburg venue the Beatles played, although the Club 40 was never
used there.
Note: Lennon's Club 40 is not to
be confused with the Hofner Club included in the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame's 2000 Lennon exhibit; that guitar, a Club 50 model, is erroneously
described as an instrument Lennon purchased in Germany in the early '60s
and shared with Harrison. More likely, Lennon picked it up not long
before he gave it to son Julian in '74.
? 1960 Hofner Senator (f-hole
acoustic), "Compensator" tailpiece: An advert
of the period shows this handsome guitar that boasted a "powerful, penetrating
tone," and doubtless one of the Quarry Men played one, but was it Lennon?
Mal Evans' widow Lil auctioned this guitar in 1984, saying Lennon had given
it to Mal. She provided a letter to her from Harrison calling it
"one of the first guitars of John's going back to Liverpool (1960-ish)."
It went for £15,500 at Sotheby's. Six years later it was auctioned
again and found a home with AEI Music in Seattle, where it is displayed
in the lobby, mounted in a brass likeness of Lennon. Although AEI
promotional
materials call it the "Abbey Road Studio Guitar" and say it was used
in the recording of "Love Me Do," "From Me to You" and "This Boy," these
claims will have to be revised, for the Senator likely never saw the inside
of Abbey Road, and the songs mentioned were all recorded with Lennon's
J-160E. No photos exist of Lennon playing this
guitar, and he never mentioned owning a Senator. An "authenticating"
photo given to the most recent purchaser shows Lennon with a totally different
guitar (his Epiphone Casino). One Quarry Man who did
own a Senator is Ken Brown, and I asked him about it recently. "I
do not recall John actually owning one during the time I knew him," he
replied. "He may of course have acquired one at some later stage.
I of course did own such a guitar." Brown added cryptically
that there was more on the subject in his autobiography, now making the
rounds of publishers. So go figure.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar