'Lay Lady Lay' Lyrics and Cobain Self-Portrait Head to Auction

Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to Lay Lady Lay are among 1,300 items going up for auction in June. (Reuters)
Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to Lay Lady Lay are among 1,300 items going up for auction in June. (Reuters)
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'Lay Lady Lay' Lyrics and Cobain Self-Portrait Head to Auction

Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to Lay Lady Lay are among 1,300 items going up for auction in June. (Reuters)
Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to Lay Lady Lay are among 1,300 items going up for auction in June. (Reuters)

Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to "Lay Lady Lay," a cheeky self-portrait by Kurt Cobain and five guitars designed by the late Eddie Van Halen are among 1,300 items going up for auction in June.

A series of hand-written letters from Britney Spears to her high school boyfriend will also be offered for sale in the Music Icons event at Julien's Auctions in Beverly Hills.

The lyrics to Dylan's 1969 song, written in pencil on a sheet of notepaper from a lumber company, carry an estimate of $500,000-600,000.

"That's the most expensive item in the auction in June. It's with all the hand notations from Bob Dylan, including chord notations," said Martin Nolan, executive director of Julien's.

Cobain's self-portrait is a caricature in black felt pen that he drew in 1992 during a tour in Singapore for his punk band Nirvana's "Nevermind" album.

It depicts the late singer playing the guitar with the words "I don't know how to play and I don't give a hoot!" Cobain memorabilia has soared in price in recent years; an acoustic guitar he played in 1993 sold for $6 million last year.

The collection of letters between Spears and her boyfriend Donald "Reg" Jones were written just as her pop career was about to explode in the late 1990s, and carry an estimate of $4,000-6,000.

"It's sort of part of her pop culture history and part of her journey, if you will," said Nolan.

Five Charvel EVH Art Series electric guitars designed and played by Eddie Van Halen, who died of a stroke in October 2020, are expected to sell for up to $50,000 each.

"He signed each of the guitars. He actually dated the tour that he played each of these individual guitars," said Nolan.

The two-day auction will take place in Beverly Hills from June 12-13.



24-Hour Live Coverage of Sweden´s Epic Moose Migration Draws to a Close

This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)
This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)
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24-Hour Live Coverage of Sweden´s Epic Moose Migration Draws to a Close

This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)
This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)

The seventh season of Swedish slow TV hit "The Great Moose Migration" will end Sunday night after 20 days of 24-hour live coverage.
The show, called " Den stora älgvandringen " in Swedish, began in 2019 with nearly a million people watching. In 2024, the production hit 9 million viewers on SVT Play, the streaming platform for national broadcaster SVT.

By midmorning Sunday, the livestream´s remote cameras captured 70 moose swimming across the Ångerman River, some 300 kilometers (187 miles) northwest of Stockholm, in the annual spring migration toward summer grazing pastures.
The livestream will end at 10 p.m. local time (2000 GMT) Sunday. It kicked off April 15, a week ahead of schedule due to warm weather and early moose movement.
Johan Erhag, SVT´s project manager for "The Great Moose Migration," said this year's crew will have produced 478 hours of footage - "which we are very satisfied with," he wrote in an email to The Associated Press Saturday evening.
Figures for this year's audience were not immediately available.
"The Great Moose Migration" is part of a trend that began in 2009 with Norwegian public broadcaster NRK´s minute-by-minute airing of a seven-hour train trip across the southern part of the country.
The slow TV style of programing has spread, with productions in the United Kingdom, China and elsewhere. The central Dutch city of Utrecht, for example, installed a " fish doorbell " on a river lock that lets livestream viewers alert authorities to fish being held up as they migrate to spawning grounds.