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How Bob Dylan’s infamous Newport Folk Festival Fender Stratocaster ended up in the back of a woman’s attic – and why its discovery was so controversial

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October 31, 2022
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Editor's Note
A controversial gig, and a controversial guitar
Bob Dylan's July 25, 1965 set at the Newport Folk Festival is one of the most infamous of his 60-year career as a performer. 

Instead of the solo set the many thousands of assembled fans were expecting, Dylan took the stage that day with a 1964 Three-Tone Sunburst Strat, and, for the first time ever, an electric band behind him.

Whether it was the reportedly poor sound quality or the mere fact that Dylan was ignoring the anthemic protest songs and world-weary love letters – all acoustic – that he had built his career on in favor of a new set of loose, sprawling, and loud electric compositions, the response was fairly immediate, and largely negative.

Though the truth of the performance was complicated, the show went into rock lore as an unmitigated disaster that turned Dylan's original folkie fanbase against him. 

What's less well-known is that the Strat Dylan used that day has a history that's equally as cloudy and controversial as that of the set it was used for. It involves an inheritance, lawyers, scholars, judges, negotiations, and a whole lot of money. In other words, the Strat's story sounds like something Bob Dylan would sing about...

Jackson Maxwell – Associate Editor, guitarworld.com
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