Media Relations
Press Release - December 5, 2024
Original Artwork That Adorned Elton John’s Album 'Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy' Sells for $212,500 at Heritage Auctions
Rare surviving poster from Buddy Holly’s Winter Dance Party realizes $187,500 during three-day $2.2 million music memorabilia event DALLAS, Texas (Dec. 5, 2024) — The Rocket Man took flight at Heritage Auctions this week. Only days before R.J. Cutler and David Furnish's documentary Elton John: Never Too Late begins streaming on Disney+, Heritage Auctions offered Alan Aldridge's original artwork that adorned John's 1975 masterpiece Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy. The result, as expected, was nothing short of fantastic itself as the dazzling, detailed work realized $212,500 during Heritage's $2.2 million December 2-4 Music Memorabilia & Concert Posters Signature® Auction. The album, John's ninth and most autobiographical, has long been a favorite of the singer-songwriter's. In a 2006 interview with Cameron Crowe, John said he "always thought that Captain Fantastic was probably my finest album because it wasn't commercial in any way. … Captain Fantastic was written from start to finish in running order, as a kind of story about coming to terms with failure — or trying desperately not to be one." Garry Shrum, Heritage's Director of Music Memorabilia, says he's not surprised by the result during an auction that saw nearly 2,400 bidders worldwide compete for several hundred musical treasures. "Captain Fantastic has sold millions of copies in every conceivable format, and every last one of them derived their cover art from this one painting by Alan Aldridge," Shrum says. "Elton's legend not only endures but continues to grow, and the result for this remarkable artwork serves a tribute to the man, his music and the myth surrounding both." One of the few surviving posters from 1959's Winter Dance Party was no less significant, featuring among its star attractions Buddy Holly and the Crickets, "The Big Bopper" J.P. Richardson, Ritchie Valens, Dion and the Belmonts and Frankie Sardo. Heritage has only offered examples of this historic cardboard three times before, always with collectors tussling over scant keepsakes from the tour cut short when Holly, Valens and Richardson were killed in the plane crash immortalized as The Day the Music Died. The Winter Dance Party poster was among the nearly 100 trophies from the David Swartz Concert Poster Collection, along with only the third poster Heritage offered from the Rolling Stones' infamous free concert at the Altamont Speedway on Dec. 6, 1969. That poster from the Gimme Shelter show opened live bidding Tuesday at $18,000 and, after another prolonged bidding war, realized $42,500. "Only three other concert posters have ever sold for more than the $187,500 realized by The Winter Dance Party poster sold in this auction, all at Heritage," says Director of Concert Posters Pete Howard. "It was so thrilling to have the winning bidder on the phone because he completely hid in the bushes until the last minute and, then, bam: He won the poster with that one final bid." One of the auction's biggest hits was scored by renowned psychedelic poster artist Stanley Mouse, whose legendary Grateful Dead "Skeleton & Roses" poster has long been a coveted favorite among collectors at Heritage. In 2015, Mouse revisited that poster using acrylics on canvas, his sole recreation of this iconic artwork. Mouse's "Skeleton & Roses" painting realized $62,500. The reason is that Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page produced the album, with Eddie Kramer serving as the engineer. Ludwig would eventually become one of rock's best-known and most celebrated mastering engineers, but when he was just 23, Kramer brought over the just-completed Zeppelin record and asked the kid if he could "make it hotter?" To which he responded: Absolutely. And by all accounts, everyone loved it; that early mix sounded like the band wasn't just in your house but playing live and loud to a packed arena inside your frontal lobe. Radio stations adored the sound and played pressings made from Ludwig's initial mix. Ludwig said the problem came when the vinyl landed on "really cheap turntables" with lousy needles, like the one owned by Ertegun's daughter. Because the record was "so hot," Ludwig has explained, it would skip on inexpensive record players. As a result, Ludwig recounts, Ertegun "freak[ed] out" and had Led Zeppelin II pulled from distribution until the label "cut all the bass out of it, so it wouldn't skip, and compressed it." The result, says Ludwig: Led Zeppelin II "sounded tinny and puny." Ludwig famously held on to his original master until now. It was publicly offered for the first time in this auction as part of his archives. Click here for complete results from Heritage's December 2-4 Music Memorabilia & Concert Posters Signature® Auction. Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Hong Kong and Tokyo. Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1,750,000 registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of 6,000,000 past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit. For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases . Hi-Res images available: Robert Wilonsky, VP Public Relations and Communications 214-409-1887 or RobertW@HA.com |