DALLAS, TX.- Heritages April 10 Concert Posters Signature® Auction realized $1.28 million and achieved a 100% sell-through rate, reaffirming the strength of the vintage concert poster market and sustained collector demand for rare, historically significant material.
The auction drew 1,363 bidders competing across 287 lots spanning the 1940s through the 1990s from Hank Williams to Nirvana. The sale was led by a landmark result for a 1959 Buddy Holly & the Crickets Winter Dance Party concert poster, which brought $100,000, marking a return to six-figure territory for the category. The exceedingly rare window card advertised a February 7, 1959 performance in Spring Valley, Illinois, just days after Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. The Big Bopper Richardson were killed in the plane crash widely remembered as the day the music died. As one of only a handful of known posters from the ill-fated tour, and the only example tied to this specific stop, the piece stands as both a cultural artifact and a touchstone of early rock history.
Heritage is extremely pleased to have started off 2026 with another million-dollar-plus concert poster auction, says Pete Howard, Director of Concert Posters at Heritage Auctions. Its very gratifying to see Buddy Hollys legacy break the $100,000 ceiling again, as well as the best psychedelic pieces doubling, tripling and sometimes even quadrupling their pre-auction estimates.
Strong results were seen across genres and eras, with particularly notable performances from early folk, psychedelic rock and counterculture material. A 1961 Bob Dylan Gerdes Folk City handbill, mailed by Dylan himself to fellow musician Tony Glover, realized $47,500, far exceeding expectations and underscoring the importance of provenance in the category. A 1969 Rolling Stones Altamont Speedway poster tied to one of the most infamous events in rock history brought $52,500, while a pristine 1968 Grateful Dead and Cream Sacramento concert poster,graded 9.8 by CGC, achieved $37,500.
Psychedelic-era material continued to perform at a high level, with a 1967 Grateful Dead translucent head-shop poster, also graded 9.8, realizing $21,250 a strong showing for a notoriously fragile and visually distinctive format. A rare 1970 Janis Joplin Schenectady silkscreen poster, signed by artist Gary Butts, brought $24,375, while a 1966 Great Society handbill featuring Grace Slickachieved $7,500, significantly outperforming expectations and highlighting continued interest in early San Francisco scene material.
According to Howard, the breadth of top-performing artists tells a larger story about the markets foundation. The real legends were out in force this auction, he said. The top-selling posters included Buddy Holly, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, the Grateful Dead, Woodstock and Janis Joplin. If that doesnt demonstrate the enduring value of our legacy artists, I dont know what does.
The auction also benefited from strong consignor participation, including material from the David Swartz Collection, the Tim Backstrom Grateful Dead Collection and the Archives of Charlie Rothschild, all of which contributed significant depth and quality to the offering.
Says Howard: With competitive bidding, record-level results for select categories and continued momentum at the high end, the April 10 sale signals a robust and evolving market for vintage concert posters, where rarity, condition and cultural significance continue to drive exceptional outcomes.