Unknown John Lennon recording to be auctioned in Denmark

Unknown John Lennon recording to be auctioned in Denmark

The 33-minute recording on audio cassette, dating back to 1970, is estimated to fetch between RM133,000 and RM197,000.

John Lennon in January 1970, playing guitar beside his wife Yoko Ono in Jutland, Denmark. (AFP pic)
COPENHAGEN:
A 1970 audio recording of John Lennon singing a previously unpublished song during a visit to Denmark will go under the hammer in Copenhagen on Sept 28, an auction house said yesterday.

The asking price for the 33-minute recording has been estimated at between €27,000 and €40,000 (RM133,000 and RM197,000).

It has been put up for sale by four men who were teenagers when they met the Beatles singer, who was spending part of the 1969-1970 winter in a small town on Denmark’s west coast.

“The tape is totally unique because it’s a conversation. It took place after a press conference with the four schoolboys and some journalists, and John Lennon played a few songs for them,” Alexa Bruun Rasmussen of the Bruun Rasmussen auction house told AFP.

“One of them, ‘Radio Peace’, has never been published,” she said.

“It’s a little piece of Danish history and when we listen to it, we can sense that John Lennon felt cosy in Denmark. He could be left alone and just be,” she said.

At the end of December 1969, Lennon visited Denmark with Yoko Ono to spend time with Ono’s daughter from another relationship, Kyoko, who was living with her father in northern Jutland at the time.

The visit, which lasted several weeks, went largely unnoticed at first. But once his presence was discovered, the star called a press conference.

Due to a series of unforeseeable events and bad weather, the four high school students ended up interviewing Lennon after the press conference, in an informal setting.

During the interview, conducted just months before The Beatles broke up, the teens were mainly interested in Lennon’s peace activism.

“With the auction, they want to pass on the message John Lennon stood for,” Bruun Rasmussen said.

She noted the “old-fashioned” charm of the recording, which is being sold with photos of the meeting and the issue of the school newspaper featuring the interview.

“To listen to the 33 minutes of the tape you need an old-fashioned cassette player, and I guess that nostalgia part will add to its value.”

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