Get it back: New hunt for missing Beatles bass guitar

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(FILES) Sir Paul McCartney performs in concert during his One on One tour at Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre on July 26, 2017 in Tinley Park, Illinois. As revealed by the Financial Times, Universal Music has been asking platforms like Spotify or Apple Music since April to ban access to its catalog to those who want to use it to enrich AI programs. Google and Universal Music are also in talks about possible licenses for AI-generated melodies and artist voices, the Financial Times also reveals. (Photo by Kamil Krzaczynski / AFP)

LONDON—A guitar expert and two journalists have launched a global hunt for a missing bass guitar owned by Paul McCartney, bidding to solve what they brand “the greatest mystery in rock and roll.”

The trio of lifelong Beatles fans are searching for McCartney’s original Hofner bass—last seen in London in 1969—in order to reunite the instrument with the former Fab Four frontman.

McCartney played the instrument throughout the 1960s, including at Hamburg’s Top Ten Club, at the Cavern Club in Liverpool and on early Beatles recordings at London’s Abbey Road studios.

“This is the search for the most important bass in history—Paul McCartney’s original Hofner,” the search party says on a website—thelostbass.com—newly created for the endeavor.

“This is the bass you hear on ‘Love Me Do,’ ‘She Loves You,’ and ‘Twist and Shout,’ The bass that powered Beatlemania—and shaped the sound of the modern world.”

McCartney bought the left-handed Hofner 500/1 Violin Bass for around £30—about £550 ($585) today—in Hamburg in 1961, during The Beatles’ four-month residency at the Top Ten Club.

It disappeared without a trace nearly eight years later in January 1969 when the band were recording the “Get Back/Let It Be” sessions in central London.

By then its appearance was unique—after being overhauled in 1964, including with a complete respray in a three-part dark sunburst polyurethane finish—and it had become McCartney’s backup bass.

‘Give something back’

The team now hunting for the guitar says it has not been seen since, but that “numerous theories and false sightings have occurred over the years.”

“With a little help from our friends—from fans and musicians to collectors and music shops—we can get the bass back to where it once belonged,” the trio stated on the website.

“Paul McCartney has given us so much over the last 62 years. The Lost Bass project is our chance to give something back.”

Nick Wass, a guitar developer for Hofner who co-wrote the definitive book on the Hofner 500/1 Violin Bass, is spearheading the search.

“It was played in Hamburg, at The Cavern Club, at Abbey Road. Isn’t that enough alone to get this bass back?” he said, adding that “I talked with him about it [and] Paul would be so happy—thrilled—if this bass could get back to him.” —AFP



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