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John Lennon's lost 1960s acoustic guitar to go up for auction

John Lennon's lost 1960s acoustic guitar to go up for auction
A memorial for late former Beatle John Lennon is seen at the Imagine mosaic in the Strawberry Fields section of Central Park to mark Lennon's 80th birthday, in New York City, US, Oct 9, 2020.
PHOTO: Reuters file

LONDON - A previously lost 12-string acoustic guitar that belonged to the late John Lennon will go up for sale at an auction in May after it was recently found in the attic of a home in Britain.

The auctioneers said Lennon played the guitar, which is expected to exceed its estimate of $600,000 (S$815,754) to $800,000, on the Beatles' 1965 album "Help!".

The guitar was lying in an attic and was rediscovered by the current owners during a house move.

The founders of US-based Julien’s Auctions said they travelled to Britain to verify the guitar and found the original case - a Maton Australian-made guitar case - in the trash.

Martin Nolan, executive director and co-founder of Julien's Auctions, told Reuters the owners knew they had the instrument at one point, but thought it had been lost.

The guitar is believed to have ended up in their hands through British musician Gordon Waller, a member of the 1960s pop duo Peter and Gordon.

"Gordon was gifted it from John Lennon, then Gordon gifted it to his road manager, and that's where the guitar stayed for all these years," Nolan said.

The guitar will be auctioned on May 29 at the Hard Rock Cafe in New York and on the auctioneer's website.

Earlier this year, a stolen Hofner bass guitar belonging to Paul McCartney was found and returned to Lennon's fellow Beatle after 51 years following a global hunt.

Musical instruments belonging to prominent members of the Beatles have fetched a high price at previous auction.

In 2015, a guitar stolen from Lennon in the 1960s sold for $2.41 million at an auction in California.

ALSO READ: 'My dad gave it to me as a birthday present': Singapore's next PM Lawrence Wong shares how his love for guitars began

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