Beatles Brick Cavern Club Vial Necklace
This necklace contains authentic brick material salvaged from the original Cavern Club in Liverpool, England. From 1961 to 1963, the Fab Four played 292 shows in the Cavern Club. This is a great collectible piece for any Beatles fan!










Beatles Brick Cavern Club Vial Necklace








































"The Cavern... Do I have memories of the Cavern? Do I? Oh yeah." ~ Paul McCartney
This groovy necklace contains brick dust from the Cavern Club, where the Beatles played over 200 shows in their early years! It's an amazing and authentic piece of Rock 'n Roll history you can wear!
Before the Beatles played for millions of viewers on The Ed Sullivan Show, the Lads from Liverpool put in thousands of hours in clubs and lounges across the UK, Germany, Sweden, and France. Yet few venues can be so closely associated with the earliest days of the Beatles as the original Cavern Club in Liverpool, England.

📸 An Authenticated Piece of Music History
The Cavern Club Brick
Before the fame and fortune, the Lads from Liverpool put in thousands of hours in clubs and lounges across the UK, Germany, Sweden, and France. Yet few venues can be so closely associated with the earliest days of the Beatles as the original Cavern Club in Liverpool, England.
The Beatles first played the Cavern Club in 1961 where they were soon noticed by talent spotter and future manager, Brian Epstein. The venue was inspired by Parisian jazz clubs and boasted an iconic brick laden cellar that served as the stage. As noted above, this necklace contains material from one of those bricks that first experienced the sound of the Beatles.

📸 The Cavern Club Beatles Brick Vial Necklace
When the original club was demolished in 1973, a selection of bricks was taken and placed at auction. Mini Museum's material comes from one of these 1973 bricks, meaning the sound of the first 1961 Beatles performance passed through the dust in this vial.
The pendant is capped with a stainless steel top and includes an 18" chain of the same material. The necklace comes in a handsome padded jewelry box complete with an informational card below the padding insert that serves as statement of authenticity. The material is sealed in a screw top vial. In order to protect it, we advise keeping it closed at all times.
This Mini Museum jewelry is made right here at our workshop by our specimen team. Every vial of brick material is measured out by hand and checked to meet our high standards of quality.

The Beatles Brick Cavern Club Vial Necklace is an incredible Beatles collector's item! Whether you're starting your collecting or looking for something new to add, this is an incredible touchstone to the birth of modern rock music from one of the greatest bands of all time.
Check out our full Beatles collection below for even more authentic specimens from the band!





Recovered from the 1973 demolition and placed at auction in 1983
Original Cavern Club Brick and Plaque
Birthplace of the Beatles
MORE ABOUT THE CAVERN CLUB

📸 The Beatles
THE DEBUT OF THE FAB FOUR
1961 was the Beatles' debut as a full group, but it wasn't John Lennon and Paul McCartney's first time at the subterranean club. They'd played the Cavern before as the Quarrymen in 1957, when the club was a strict jazz only venue.
Sir Paul McCartney recalled that first gig in Spenser Leigh's book The Cavern Club: The Rise of The Beatles and Merseybeat:
"We fibbed about our repertoire and managed to get a date there, where we proceeded to announce songs like 'Long Tall Sally' as written by Blind Lemon Jefferson and 'Blue Suede Shoes,' the famous creation of the legendary blues artist Leadbelly! When the owners of the Cavern realized what we were doing, then sent little notes up to the stage complaining but it was too late."

📸 George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon performing at the Cavern Club.
Four years later much had changed. The Beatles had picked up George Harrison (1958) and drummer Peter Best (1960). They'd also been playing a new kind of music, a rock-and-roll offshoot called "beat," which was sweeping over the UK and the club scene in Hamburg, Germany. The new owner of the Cavern Club also embraced beat music and the throngs of screaming teenage girls that seemed to follow their favorite bands everywhere they went.
From 1961 to 1963, the Fab Four played 292 shows in the Cavern Club. This is where they first met manager Brian Epstein, who came to nearly all of their shows for three weeks straight. It was also the location of their famous 1962 Welcome Home concert when the band returned from their final residency in Hamburg, and the frenzy that would become Beatlemania was first put on display. Ringo Starr also made his public debut here with the band just two months later, and before the year was out the group shared the stage with the legendary Little Richard.
On August 3, 1963, just a month after recording "She Loves You," the Beatles played their final performance at the Cavern Club. Six months later the Beatles rocketed to stardom while the Cavern Club played host to other legendary bands such as the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, Elton John, the Kinks, Queen, and the Who.
While the Beatles soared to success, the beat wave in England came to a close and the Cavern Club fell on hard times. The club was demolished in 1973, but the bricks were saved.
In 1983, a selection of bricks was auctioned for charity and the remaining bricks were used in the rebuilding of the Cavern Club on the original site. This specimen comes from a selection of those original bricks purchased at auction by Mini Museum.

📸 The exterior of the rebuilt Cavern Club today
Nowadays, the Cavern Club is still an excellent venue to catch a show in Liverpool, with live music every night.
The memories the Beatles had of the venue were always fond ones. It was the crucible for not just the Beatles, but the wave of rock and roll that would define music to this day.
In 2015, Paul McCartney said of the Cavern Club:
"It was the breeding ground for what would become the Beatles' early repertoire, and I will always think of the place with great affection for the days spent with my pals in its sweaty, damp atmosphere."
Further Reading
Braun, Michael. Love Me Do: The Beatles' Progress. Penguin, 1964.
Kruse, Robert J. "The Beatles as Place Makers: Narrated Landscapes in Liverpool, England." Journal of Cultural Geography 22.2 (2005): 87-114.
Thompson, Phil. The Best of Cellars: The Story of the Cavern Club. Tempus, 2007.



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