Hendrix fire-guitar goes on auction
Updated on 16 July 2008
One of Jimi Hendrix's favourite guitars, set alight on a London stage more than 40 years ago and thought to have been lost forever, is to be auctioned.
The legendary guitar - a 1965 Fender Stratocaster - was famously doused with lighter fuel and set alight by the rock luminary during a one-off performance at London's Finsbury Astoria in March 1967.
Hendrix had to be rushed to hospital with minor burns to his hands after the stunt, and the guitar, slightly damaged along the neck and pickboard, was recovered by his staff.
It eventually ended up in the hands of his press officer, Tony Garland, who stored it in his parents' garage, where it remained until it was unearthed last year by Garland's nephew.
It has an estimate of £500,000 and will be auctioned off with other memorabilia, including The Doors frontman Jim Morrison's last notebook of poems.
Auctioneer Ted Owen, said: "When Hendrix set this guitar alight it marked a watershed in live performance."
He added: "He raised the bar of what could be expected and paved the way for a series of imitations and pastiche that exist to this day."
Hendrix, who died in 1970, burned two guitars on stage - he repeated the stunt at a festival later in 1967 - but the one to be auctioned is the only example that survives intact.
A previous auction of a Hendrix guitar, known as the Woodstock Stratocaster, fetched almost £1 million.
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