Skip to main content

Enter your email below to be the first to hear about new releases, upcoming events, and more from Dig!

Please enter a valid email address
Please accept the terms
Back
18 December 2021

Rare David Bowie Acetate Sells For Almost £14,500 At Auction

David Bowie Rare Acetate Auction
Photo: Pictorial Press/Alamy Stock Photo
Spread the love

A rare, early David Bowie vinyl acetate, recorded while the singer was fronting Davy Jones and the Lower Third, has sold at auction for almost £14,500.

The seven inch vinyl acetate, featuring Bowie’s band’s 1965 recording of I Want Your Love, written by John Dee and Jack Tarr, sold to a UK buyer for £14,448 on December 16 at an auction hosted by specialist vinyl auction house Wessex Auction Rooms. The track was later recorded by The Pretty Things, on their 1965 album Get The Picture?

The record was expected to attract bids of up to £12,000. The seller purchased the physical archive of one of the UK’s largest publishing companies a few years ago: the archive includes approximately 500,000 records including many demos, promos, and unmarked acetates.

This particular acetate was one of the ones with no info other than the name of the track, so it took some months trawling through the publishing company database info, and speaking with music industry insiders, to determine which artist recorded it. This is the third Bowie track that has been discovered in the archive over the last two years, with unreleased Bowie recordings of I Do Believe I Love You (from 1966) and Run Piper Run (from 1967) having previously gone under the hammer.

“It’s been a real buzz to be the custodian of such an important piece of musical history,” says Martin Hughes, Director / Music Specialist at Wessex Auction Rooms. “As a specialist vinyl auctioneer I am lucky enough to handle rare vinyl records every day, but something like this does not come along every day. As you can imagine, we had interest from David Bowie enthusiasts around the world as well as general music collectors and there wasn’t a single spare phone line when the auction took place. The gavel eventually came down to an internet bidder in the UK.”

Sign up to our newsletter

Be the first to hear about new releases, upcoming events, and more from Dig!

Sign Up