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boy, it is a shame that that beautiful old home is in that condition
Homes where music history was made
By Colleen Kane of CNBC
The following homes include places where famous bands were formed, beloved songs or albums were written, musicians died and one massive hit-maker of the 1950s and '60s was incorrectly thought to have met his end.
These storied abodes range in value from around $270,000 to $19 million. A few were bought or saved by dedicated fans.
From London to Los Angeles, here are nine homes where music history was made.
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Homes where music history was made
Pink Floyd
- Location: London
- Price: $1.922 million
On Sept. 20, the three-story North London home where Roger Waters, Syd Barrett and Nick Mason formed Pink Floyd went up on the auction block. The lads rented from their college tutor Mike Leonard, a technician who helped create the band's light show.
After Leonard's death this year, the home became available for the first time since the band lived there as students in the 1960s.
The building was a fixer-upper but still pulled in nearly $2 million, as did the adjacent lot that was sold at auction. The remaining evidence of Leonard and the Pink Floyd legacy were Leonard's workshop, which was featured in a 1968 BBC broadcast; a xylophone thought to have belonged to Leonard; and a speaker built into the eaves. Also, according to an interview with Mason, "The hood of my Aston Martin International might still be buried in the garden."
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Homes where music history was made
Spice Girls
- Location: Los Angeles
- Price: $18.9 million
- Bedrooms: 6
- Bathrooms: 7
- Square footage: 7,903
This 1928 Spanish hacienda in Bel Air was the home of a one-time power couple, EMI's former President Ken Berry and his wife, Nancy, who worked on advertising and promotional campaigns for acts he signed.
The house is a relic of bygone days of record-label excess. According to a Wall Street Journal article republished on The Independent website, this home often served as a "late-night crash pad for itinerant rock stars and music producers," but the only group identified in that article as having used the house was the Spice Girls.
The patio here is where Scary, Sporty, Baby, Posh and Ginger set their boom box in 1997 and choreographed their way into pop history, creating their act and landing a contract with EMI. Spice Girls superfans who can't afford the nearly $19 million should take heart: The house is also for rent for $40,000 month.
Homes where music history was made
Allman Brothers
- Location: Macon, Ga.
- Price: $271,000 (Zillow.com estimate)
- Bedrooms: 5
- Bathrooms: 3.5
- Square footage: 4,442
The three-story Tudor home known as the Big House was the home of original members of the Allman Brothers Band and their "old ladies," kids and roadies from 1970 to 1973.
Along with the gardens, fountains and fish pond, the circa-1900 house had stained-glass windows and a ballroom on the third floor. The sunroom became the music room. The rent for the estate at the time was just $225 a month.
Sadly, it was the last place Duane Allman was seen by loved ones, at a birthday party just before he died in a motorcycle accident. A year later, band member Berry Oakley also died nearby in a motorcycle accident. The publicity surrounding the deaths led to the eviction of the remaining residents from the Big House.
The home is now the Allman Brothers Band museum and is available for rent for events and parties. In 1994, the house also provided the initial rehearsal space and launch point for the Allmans' offshoot band Gov't Mule.
Homes where music history was made
Bruce Springsteen
- Location: Long Branch, N.J.
- Price: $280,000
- Square footage: 828
A 25-year-old Bruce Springsteen lived in this modest Jersey Shore cottage in 1974 and '75, and he accomplished a few important things in his time there. By the time Springsteen moved out, he had written "Born to Run," "Thunder Road" and "Backstreets."
In 2009, it went on sale for $299,000 and was bought for $280,000 by fans who wanted to prevent the home from being razed.
The buyers were New Jersey residents Ryan DeCarolis, Kim McDermott and Gerald Ferrara. DeCarolis, then 28, said he would live there and was looking forward to showing the home to other fans.
Homes where music history was made
Grateful Dead
- Location: San Francisco
- Price: N/A
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2
- Square footage: 2,680
The 1890 Queen Anne Victorian at 710 Ashbury St. in Haight-Ashbury is sometimes known as the Cranston-Keenan building but is more popularly called by its address or "the Grateful Dead house." It's the one seen in early photos of the band in which they're on the front porch personifying Haight-Ashbury around the Summer of Love in 1967.
That year, all members of the band were charged with marijuana possession at 710 Ashbury, forever cementing the address and its occupants in history.
Forty-two years later, drummer Mickey Hart recalled the bust in Spin magazine. "We were kids doing what kids do. … Not that there wasn't a lot of dope in the house, but the inspector actually planted the stuff that they arrested us for," he said. "They could have gone into our cabinet and found a whole bunch of it. We were set up, but it made us famous. Getting busted was the best thing that ever happened to us. We made headlines. It certainly didn't stop our way of life — in a way, it validated it. We thought that these people really violated our sanctity. We didn't take it sitting down. So I look back on it and go, 'Wow, that was really fun.'"
According to Trulia, which doesn't have an estimated value for 710 Ashbury, the average price for similar homes is $1.57 million.
Homes where music history was made
Fats Domino
- Location: New Orleans
Legendary R&B pianist and singer Fats Domino is a lifelong resident of the Lower Ninth Ward, and when Hurricane Katrina devastated the neighborhood, he occupied a compound of several houses there.
Next door to his large home is his much more ornamented office, bedecked in Domino's name, initials, stars and the New Orleans Saints' colors of black and gold.
In the confusion in the days that followed the flood, Domino was missing for a few days. Someone spray painted "RIP FATS You will be missed" on his house, and the photos of the graffiti were seen worldwide.
Fortunately, rumors of Domino's death were untrue. He and his family were rescued by boat, then taken in by Louisiana State University quarterback JaMarcus Russell. Domino lost many possessions in the flood, including two pianos, a photo of him with Elvis and some of his gold records, but he did recover other gold records.
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Homes where music history was made
Amy Winehouse
- Location: London
- Price: approximately $4.33 million
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2 full, 2 half
- Square footage: 2,500
Amy Winehouse was a larger-than-life performer haunted by equally large demons that led to her early death. In 2011, she died of alcohol poisoning at age 27 in her flat in Camden Square in London. Swarms of fans immediately set up a shrine outside.
Her father wanted to keep the four-story home where she lived her final year as the headquarters of the Amy Winehouse Foundation, but he put it on the market earlier this year, citing upkeep costs. Amy Winehouse paid about $2.88 million for the flat in 2010.
The listing has since been removed, and there is no record of the home having been sold.
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Homes where music history was made
John Coltrane
- Location: Huntington, N.Y.
- Price: $975,000 in 2006
This 1952 brick rambler on a quiet Long Island street is where John Coltrane lived with his wife, Alice, from 1964 until his death in 1967. It's also the home of Coltrane Studios, where he composed his most famous work, "A Love Supreme," and all of his acclaimed final pieces.
The Coltrane Home has been in danger of demolition and has been saved by grassroots efforts led by historian and jazz fan Steve Fulgoni. In 2006, the town of Huntington purchased the home. It is now a protected historic landmark, but is still in need of money to complete restoration before it can be opened to the public.
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Homes where music history was made
The Beatles
- Location: Los Angeles
- Price: $4.199 million
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3
- Square footage: 4,116
Late one right in 1967, George Harrison was staying in this house on Blue Jay Way, waiting for a publicist and Harry Nilsson, when he wrote the song "Blue Jay Way." The house was loaned to him during his stay in Los Angeles by Peggy Lee's manager, Ludwig Gerber.
One line in the song goes, "There's a fog upon L.A., and my friends have lost their way." Harrison explained the song's origin in the Beatles Bible (link via Zillow).
"I waited and waited. I felt really knackered with the flight, but I didn't want to go to sleep until he came. There was a fog and it got later and later. To keep myself awake, just as a joke to pass the time while I waited, I wrote a song about waiting for him in Blue Jay Way. There was a little Hammond organ in the corner of this house which I hadn't noticed until then … so I messed around on it and the song came."
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