If you love a good mystery I’ve got one for you.
And if you love a good story about finding a valuable guitar in the closet you’ll really love this one.
This is also a great story about how a vintage guitar is authenticated.
The Concert: Newport 65
Remember the story? Bob Dylan’s appearance at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 was filled with controversy. That was when he went electric and showed up with a rock and roll band (actually the Paul Butterfield Blues Band) and played the second part of his set with a Fender Stratocaster instead of his usual Gibson acoustic. He was booed by some of the crowd and eventually stopped after three songs because he was so upset.
There was even a story that Pete Seger, an organizer of the concert and well-known folkie, was so upset at Dylan he threatened to have the electricity turned off.
Anyway, Dylan went back on and finished the concert solo playing what the audience expected.
During that electric part of the show Dylan played a sunburst 1964 Fender Stratocaster. He could clearly be seen playing it in many of the pictures of the concert. Supposedly that guitar disappeared or was lost, although Dylan disputes this version.
Video of his performance at the 1965 festival is hard to find. They’ve basically become as rare as finding a 1964 Stratocaster in the closet. Here’s the only ones I could find.
Stratocaster In The Closet
Fast forward to 2012 when the PBS show History Detectives was contacted by New Jersey resident Dawn Peterson saying she had a guitar that she wanted to have investigated. She got it from her deceased father who had said it belonged to Dylan and he got it when he was a pilot and flew Dylan, Peter, Paul and Mary and other musicians around the northeast briefly.
If you are not familiar with the now cancelled show History Detectives on PBS, the concept is… people bring historical items to them and they do the research to determine if the back story is true and the item has any value. They usually work with paintings, and sculptures, and old antiques. They find experts on the subject and ask them to evaluate the pieces and sometimes do scientific evaluations to test for authenticity.
So Dawn had claimed her father got it when it was left on the plane after the concert. She said he tried to contact Dylan’s management to come get it but they never responded. So it sat in the closet for many years until she decided to contact the show.
Plus The Manuscripts
The guitar case even had some old hand-written and typed lyric sheets in it. Were those Dylan’s very own scratchings of songs he was working on? What a find those would be. And what were they valued if they were authenticated to be real Dylan song lyrics, written during probably his most prolific and powerful songwriting era.
So there were several clues that were just waiting to be examined.
And examined they were. The show contacted a Dylan-memorabilia expert by the name of Jeff Gold to take a look. He verified it could be the guitar but the real kicker was he examined the song sheets and concluded that it was clearly Dylan’s handwriting and some of the lyrics had actually been used later on songs on Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde classic album.
The show also took the guitar to a vintage guitar expert, Andy Babiuk, and he took the guitar apart and compared it to photos. He said he was 99.9% sure it was the same guitar in the pictures from the show.
So Who Actually Owns It?
Dylan claimed he actually still has the guitar from the concert and that it might be one of several that was stolen from him around that time.
My personal opinion is he doesn’t know himself. Stratocasters were very common back then (I had a 1965 sunburst Strat myself) and he may have had several that looked similar. They sold for about $300 back then so they were not considered special. He could have just lost track of them during the hub bub of touring and roadies carrying around the equipment. After all they were left on the plane and no one even claimed them.
Besides…
You know those rock and roll guitarists of the time were notoriously undependable. I’ve heard rumors that some were even on drugs.
So whatever happened to that famous Stratocaster?
Over time Miss Patersong got the rights to the guitar and decided to sell. There was an auction in 2013 at Christie’s famous aution house. The one-of-a-kind guitar was sold for $965,000, setting a new world auction record for any guitar, according to a statement from the auction house.
The 1964 Fender Stratocaster was purchased by an unidentified bidder, said a Christie’s spokesperson. I wonder who that might be and if it would ever turn up again. Hmm…