The four-storey, five-bedroom home comes with a guide price of $27.6 million (£22 million), reports the Daily Mail.
That’s the price tag which musician, photographer and philanthropist Julian – only child of John Lennon’s marriage to his first wife, Cynthia – has put on the house which he’s owned for the past 25 years or so.
Described as a ‘passion project’, the four-storey house, which has five bedrooms, four bathrooms, and numerous balconies, is the sort of architectural gem which could have appeared in a play by Noel Coward or a novel by Somerset Maugham, who memorably called the Riviera, his home for many years, ‘a sunny place for shady people’.
MeantimeYoko Ono left Dakota Building (NYC), after 50 years, to move to a farm purchased with John Lennon.
Yoko, who just turned 91, has quit New York City to move to a farm near Franklin.
Reclusive Yoko hands over her business interests in The Beatles and John Lennon to their son Sean. Last month Sean Yoko Lennon was appointed a director at eight companies linked to Yoko and the Beatles.
She left the Upper West Side apartment she shared with John for decades during the pandemic and has chosen to remain on the couple's 600-acre farm full-time
John was famously murdered in the doorway of the elite Dakota Building, where the pair shared their apartment, on December 8, 1980.
On the John Lennon' last day of life he said: “I hope to die before Yoko because if she died I wouldn't know how to survive.
As Yoko Ono later told, that was a beautiful day in New York, the sky was clear and the air was crisp: the couple had a lot of commitments planned, including a photo shoot, an interview and another work session on their song Walking On Thin Ice at Record Plant studios.
As reported by the Smithsonian magazine, after having breakfast at 'Café La Fortuna' with Yoko Ono, John Lennon went to the 'Viz-à-Viz' (hairdresser) to have his hair fixed: when he came out of the salon, the artist had a new cut in retro style, which was very reminiscent of what he had at the beginning of his career. Soon after he went back to his apartment, where photographer Annie Leibovitz was setting up the set for the photo shoot they had already started the previous week.
Once the photo shoot was over, John went downstairs where, in Yoko Ono's office, the RKO Radio team was waiting for an interview with Dave Sholin. He told him about his typical day: "I get up around 6, go to the kitchen, have a coffee, cough a little and then smoke a cigarette, while I watch the Sesame Street program with my son Sean. I make sure you watch PBS and not cartoons with commercials. I'm not interested in cartoons, but I don't want him to watch commercials.
Just a year before the autobiographical film came out, Yoko Ono, Lennon’s widowed wife, handed Paul two cassette tapes from John. Along with this heartwarming track, Lennon composed a song he called “Grow Old With Me” that was prepared within the theme of remorse that existed on this tape.
Lennon recorded this as a home demo on a cassette tape in the late 1970s, and had planned to record it properly on the follow-up album to Double Fantasy. Unfortunately he was killed before he could record a studio version. Yoko Ono released his single-track version of this on the Milk And Honey posthumous album in 1984. Later she asked Beatles producer George Martin to score an orchestral arrangement for this to use on the 1998 Lennon Anthology set.
Paul McCartney wanted to make this the third Beatles "reunion song," but producer Jeff Lynne told him this would be very difficult because of a hum on the cassette that couldn't be eliminated. Also, George Harrison objected because it was too sad, given the nature of John's death - Yoko couldn't "grow old along with him," as the song urged.
"Now And Then" (also known as "I Don't Want To Lose You" or "Miss You") is the name given to an unreleased composition by John Lennon. It was first recorded in demo form in 1978 and was considered in 1995 as a third possible reunion single by Lennon's former band, The Beatles, for their 1995 autobiographical project The Beatles Anthology.
Despite reports, for the most part the verses are nearly complete, though there are still a few lines that Lennon did not flesh out on the demo tape performance.
In March 1995, the three surviving Beatles began work on "Now And Then" by recording a rough backing track that was to be used as an overdub. However, after only two days of recording, all work on the song ceased and plans for a third reunion single were scrapped permanently. According to McCartney, George Harrison "didn't want to do it," possibly because new verses would have had to be written.