Piano John Lennon used to write Beatles songs fetches record amount at auction

It was sold as part of The Jim Irsay Collection: Hall of Fame on Thursday at Christie’s in New York.
Piano John Lennon used to write Beatles songs fetches record amount at auction

By Carla Feric, Press Association Entertainment Reporter

John Lennon’s piano which was used to compose songs for the Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album has set the record for the most expensive piece of Beatles memorabilia sold, fetching nearly €2.9 million at auction.

It was sold as part of The Jim Irsay Collection: Hall of Fame, with drumming equipment belonging to fellow Beatle Ringo Starr also among the record-breaking sales.

The collection consisted of music, film and sports memorabilia and went under the hammer on Thursday at Christie’s New York auction house.

A Ludwig drum kit
Ringo Starr’s first Ludwig drum kit (Christie’s Images Ltd 2026/PA)

Among the items up for sale was a Broadwood upright piano belonging to Lennon, and used to write songs such as Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds, A Day In The Life, and Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite!, featured on the Beatles’ eighth studio album.

The instrument was estimated to fetch between 400,000 dollars and 600,000 dollars but instead sold for 3,247,000 dollars (€2.9 million), setting the record as the most expensive object from the group to be sold.

Lennon died in 1980, aged 40.

Formed in the 1960s, the Beatles, the best-selling musical act of all time and made up of Lennon, Ringo Starr,  Paul McCartney and George Harrison, achieved 18 UK number one singles and 15 UK number one albums.

A drum head and drumsticks
The drum head used by Sir Ringo, which sold for more than two million dollars (Christie’s Images Ltd 2026/PA)

Items belonging to the bands’ drummer Starr were also up for sale including his first Ludwig drum kit, which was used in live performances and studio sessions with the band in its early years from May 1963 to February 1964.

The three-piece drum kit sold for 2,393,000 dollars (€2,087,078) and briefly broke the record for the most expensive drum set sold, until a drum head which was part of his second Ludwig kit sold in the next lot for 2,881,000 dollars (€2,512,692).

The drum head was used during the Beatles’ first visit to America when the group performed on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, and also set the record as the most expensive item belonging to Sir Ringo to be sold.

A series of photographs, handwritten letters and signed postcards from Lennon were also among the items in the sale, as well as an affidavit filed by his bandmate McCartney to break up the hit band.

A drum kit
Ringo Starr's first drum kit (Christie’s Images Ltd 2026/PA)

Also among the items for sale was memorabilia from American musician Kurt Cobain, the founder of grunge band Nirvana.

The Fender Mustang guitar used in the music video for the group’s hit song Smells Like Teen Spirit became the most expensive item belonging to the late singer to be sold, fetching 6,907,000 dollars (€6,025,420) at the auction.

A series of items belonging to The Doors late frontman Jim Morrison was up for sale, as well as handwritten lyrics for singer Bob Dylan’s hit track The Times They Are A-Changin’ – which sold for 2,515,000 dollars (€2,193,658).

Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour’s ‘Black Strat’ (Fender Stratocaster) was also among the record-breaking sales, fetching 14,550,000 dollars (€12,702,218) and becoming the most expensive guitar sold.

The president of Christie’s Americas, Julien Pradels, said: “Lot after lot, we felt like we were making history.

“The Irsay sale did justice to the brilliance of the collector, and of the monumental pieces he brought together, iconic objects that tell the story of our culture and our times.

“The Irsay collection is singular, but Christie’s will have other amazing sales in this space moving forward.”

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