Bartell was a Riverside, California-based maker of guitars and basses, founded by Paul Barth and Ted Peckels.[1] The company was active from 1964 to 1969.[1] According to Peckels, approximately 2,000 instruments were made during this period.[1] The company also made instruments for Hohner, St. George, and Lancer.[1]
George Harrison
George Harrison was gifted a Bartell fretless guitar (the first prototype) by Hollywood session player and music shop owner Al Casey, whose wife Maxine on 1 August 1967 took it up to Blue Jay Way, where Harrison was staying. Harrison took the guitar back to the UK, where it ended up at Abbey Road Studios. John Lennon was intrigued by the Bartell, but he found it difficult to play. They passed it around, then put it in the studio locker in studio 2. In a 6 June 1968 radio interview with Kenny Everett, Harrison referred to it as 'the mad guitar'. Lennon was heard playing it while being interviewed by Everett.[2]
In March 2020, this guitar was shown on the BBC Television programme Antiques Roadshow,[4][5] where Jon Baddeley of Bonhams said "this is an incredibly rare Beatles guitar with an enviable history, which turns out to be one of the most valuable items ever seen on the show."[4] It was valued at £300,000 - £400,000 by Baddeley.[4] The programme included a picture of Harrison with his guitars, in which the Bartell is clearly visible.[4]
Despite the higher valuation, the guitar was sold by Bonhams at an October 2020 auction for £237,562 (including buyer's premium).[3]
^Jeff Strawman (2020-12-07). "Hohner XK-250 Fretless Bass". Led Zeppelin: Achilles Last Stand. Archived from the original on 2021-04-16. John Paul Jones used the Hohner XK-250 Fretless Bass on the 1972 Australian Tour and some dates on the Summer 1972 US Tour for Bron-Y-Aur Stomp.