The guitar that Bob Dylan used to go electric at the Newport Folk Festival 50 years ago is back in the Rhode Island city.
“Dylan’s guitar is home,” festival producer Jay Sweet said through a spokeswoman on Friday, the opening day of this year’s three-day outdoor festival.
Dylan used the Fender Stratocaster in his performance on July 25, 1965, when he strode on stage in a leather jacket and launched into the song Maggie’s Farm. The performance drew a mix of boos and cheers from the audience, from some who were thrilled by the performance and others who felt abandoned by someone who until then had been best known for singing protest songs with an acoustic guitar.
Photo: AP
The moment is considered one of the most important moments in rock history.
Jim Irsay, owner of the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts, bought the guitar in 2013 for US$965,000. It was the most expensive guitar ever sold at auction.
The curator of his rare guitar collection brought it to the festival on Friday.
This weekend’s festival is paying tribute to Dylan’s performance in a number of ways, including a still-secret lineup of about a dozen acts today that will not be revealed until they step on stage. The festival is also hosting a discussion of a book out this month that examines the performance and what led up to it: Dylan Goes Electric! Newport, Seeger, Dylan, and the Night that Split the Sixties by Elijah Wald.
Organizers say they also hope the guitar can be played this weekend, although it has not been played in public in 50 years. It was not clear who would play the guitar, although Sweet has said repeatedly that while an invitation was extended to Dylan, he would not be coming to the festival this year.
The last time he played at the Newport Folk Festival was in 2002.
“It [the guitar] is such an important part of musical history, and Dylan was our generation’s Shakespeare,” Irsay said.
“So it’s our way to give back and share,” he added.
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