✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

1963 Fender Stratocaster, David Bowie Signed/Live Aid Provenance

Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5
Product image 6
Product image 7
Product image 8
Product image 9
Product image 10
Product image 11
Product image 12
Product image 13
Product image 14
Product image 15
Product image 16
Product image 17
Product image 18
Product image 19
Product image 20
Product image 21
Product image 22
Product image 23
Product image 24
Product image 25
Product image 26
Product image 27
Product image 28
Product image 29
Product image 30
Product image 31
Product image 32
Product image 33
Product image 34
Product image 35
Product image 36
Product image 37
Product image 38
Product image 39
Product image 40
Product image 41
Product image 42
Product image 43
Product image 44
Product image 45
Product image 46
Product image 47
Product image 48
Product image 49
Product image 50
Product image 51

1963 Fender Stratocaster, David Bowie Signed/Live Aid Provenance

1963 Fender Stratocaster, David Bowie Signed/Live Aid Provenance

This guitar was owned by Kevin Armstrong who purchased the guitar in 1984 and used it on Iggy Pop’s Bla Blah Blah album and on David Bowie’s Absolute Beginners album along with the Dancing in the Street single with Mick Jagger. He also used the guitar for David Bowie’s performance at Live Aid in 1985. Kevin asked David to sign the guitar a few years later as he was trying to raise funds to replace a 65 strat that had been stolen in LAX. The picture you see is of them both backstage in Gothenburg on the Glass Spiders tour where Iggy Pop was supporting David Bowie.
The guitar has certainly seen some life. The body has been refinished and has both Kevin Armstrong and David Bowie’s signatures in silver pen across the top. Under the pickguard there has been a route for a mini humbucker in the neck position. There is evidence of some nail holes but none of the previous finish. As you'd expect for a guitar such as this, there are a substantial amount of dings and knocks. 
The neck too has been refinished with a new decal having been applied. Its been refretted with wider frets, these are in good condition with some wear. The neck is dated at October 1963.
The hardware and plastics have all been changed. The bridge seems to be a much later example stamped with Japan on the base. 
Electronically two of the pickups are correct and don’t look to have been rewound. The neck pickup is a later example and all the pots and switch have been changed.
The guitar comes with a period brown tolex hardshell case for a Fender offset.
This guitar does sound great. The pickups provide a warm tone across all three positions that run the gamut from full to cutting without getting thin.
A piece of music history, you might think you are cool but you're not Kevin Armstrong's 1963 Fender Stratocaster cool…

$21,995.00
1963 Fender Stratocaster, David Bowie Signed/Live Aid Provenance
$21,995.00

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

This guitar was owned by Kevin Armstrong who purchased the guitar in 1984 and used it on Iggy Pop’s Bla Blah Blah album and on David Bowie’s Absolute Beginners album along with the Dancing in the Street single with Mick Jagger. He also used the guitar for David Bowie’s performance at Live Aid in 1985. Kevin asked David to sign the guitar a few years later as he was trying to raise funds to replace a 65 strat that had been stolen in LAX. The picture you see is of them both backstage in Gothenburg on the Glass Spiders tour where Iggy Pop was supporting David Bowie.
The guitar has certainly seen some life. The body has been refinished and has both Kevin Armstrong and David Bowie’s signatures in silver pen across the top. Under the pickguard there has been a route for a mini humbucker in the neck position. There is evidence of some nail holes but none of the previous finish. As you'd expect for a guitar such as this, there are a substantial amount of dings and knocks. 
The neck too has been refinished with a new decal having been applied. Its been refretted with wider frets, these are in good condition with some wear. The neck is dated at October 1963.
The hardware and plastics have all been changed. The bridge seems to be a much later example stamped with Japan on the base. 
Electronically two of the pickups are correct and don’t look to have been rewound. The neck pickup is a later example and all the pots and switch have been changed.
The guitar comes with a period brown tolex hardshell case for a Fender offset.
This guitar does sound great. The pickups provide a warm tone across all three positions that run the gamut from full to cutting without getting thin.
A piece of music history, you might think you are cool but you're not Kevin Armstrong's 1963 Fender Stratocaster cool…