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Coco Montoya

 
Artist: Coco Montoya
Coco Montoya

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Eric Bibb, Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters

Performed Songs By:

Dave Steen

Worked With:

Joe Yuele, Jim Gaines, Bob Haynes

Formal Connection With:

See Coco Montoya Lyrics
  • Born: 1951, Santa Monica, CA
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "The Essential Coco Montoya
  • Representative Songs: "Tumbleweed", "Monkey See, Monkey Do", "Same Dog

Biography

Though he grew up as a drummer and was raised on rock & roll, Coco Montoya became an outstanding blues guitarist in the '90s after stints in the bands of Albert Collins and John Mayall. Montoya debuted as a leader in 1995 with the Blind Pig album Gotta Mind to Travel and garnered an award for Best New Blues Artist at the following year's Handy Awards ceremonies.

Born in Santa Monica, Montoya played drums for a local rock band that toured the region during the mid-'70s, playing in area clubs. Although he had recently been turned on to blues at an Albert King show, he was somewhat unprepared to sit in with another blues legend -- "the Iceman" Albert Collins -- when a bar-owner friend of Montoya invited the bluesman to play at his nightclub. Though his inexperience showed, the young drummer impressed Collins enough to hire him for a Pacific Northwest tour three months later. The tour soon ended, but the pair's affiliation remained for more than five years, while Montoya learned much about the handling of blues guitar from "the Master of the Telecaster."

By the early '80s, Coco Montoya was back in the small-time nightclub business, playing guitar with several regional bands. At one night's show, he realized that John Mayall was in the audience, so he dedicated a cover of "All Your Love" to the British blues maestro. The song prompted Mayall to hire Montoya as lead guitarist for a new version of the Bluesbreakers he had formed. Despite the enormous pressure of filling a spot once held by Eric Clapton and Peter Green, Montoya jumped at the opportunity.

His first album with the Bluesbreakers came in 1985. Mayall had not released an album in five years at that point and the Bluesbreakers had been dead for more than 15, but the live album Behind the Iron Curtain proved Mayall's viability thanks mostly to the fiery work of Montoya. The guitarist appeared on three studio albums with Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, but then struck out on his own by the mid-'90s. Signed to Blind Pig, Montoya released Gotta Mind to Travel in 1995 with help from Mayall and another former Bluesbreaker compatriot, rhythm guitarist Debbie Davies. After years of toil under Collins and Mayall, Montoya was finally in the spotlight and his award as Best New Blues Artist of 1996 proved quite ironic, given his years of experience. His second album, Ya Think I'd Know Better, was followed by 1997's Just Let Go. At that point, Montoya and Blind Pig parted company and he signed with Alligator Records. Suspicion was released in 2000, followed two years later by Can't Look Back, and Dirty Deal in 2007. All three discs incorporated a definitive soul/R&B approach. ~ John Bush & Al Campbell, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Coco Montoya
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Coco Montoya

Coco Montoya - Live in Concert
Background information
Birth name Henry Montoya
Born 1 January 1951 (1951-01-01) (age 58)
Santa Monica, California, United States
Genres Blues, blue-eyed soul
Occupations Musician, songwriter,
Instruments Vocals, Guitar
Years active 1990 - present
Associated acts John Mayall's Bluesbreakers
Website Fender Stratocaster

Coco Montoya (b. Henry Montoya, January 1, 1951 in Santa Monica, California) is a blues guitarist and former member of John Mayall's Bluesbreakers

Contents

Musical career

Montoya's career began in the mid-70s when Albert Collins asked him to join his band as drummer. Collins took Montoya under his wing and taught him his "icy hot" guitar style. The two remained friends even after Montoya left Collins' band.

In the early 80s John Mayall heard Montoya playing guitar in a Los Angeles bar. Soon after Mayall asked Montoya to join the newly reformed Bluesbreakers. He remained a member of the band for 10 years.

In the early 90s Montoya decided it was time to go out on his own. He has recorded several highly acclaimed blues CDs.

In 1995 he appeared with the Cate Brothers for the resumption of their recording career on their release, Radioland. [1]

In 2002, he featured on the Bo Diddley tribute album Hey Bo Diddley - A Tribute!, performing the song "Pills"...

Instruments

Montoya is left-handed but plays "upside-down right-handed" guitar. In other words he can play a guitar strung for right-handed playing, with bass strings at the upper edge of the fretboard and treble strings at the lower edge, rotating the guitar so he stops the strings with his right-hand and picks them with his left hand. Thus for him the treble strings are at the upper edge, and the bass strings are at the lower edge. Few other blues guitarists play their guitars left-handed and strung differently. (One exception would be that of Doyle Bramhall II.) This contrasts with the style of fellow left-handers Jimi Hendrix and Tony Iommi, amongst others, whose guitars are re-strung for left-handers (although Hendrix would also play guitars that had not been re-strung).

Most current pictures of Montoya playing show him with a guitar such as a Fender Stratocaster, with a left-handed body (a mirror image of the right-handed body), a neck and headstock typical of a right-handed Stratocaster, so the tuners are on the bottom edge for him, and the strings arranged "upside-down" relative to the left-handed body.

Discography

  • 1995 Gotta Mind To Travel
  • 1996 Ya Think I'd Know Better
  • 1997 Just Let Go
  • 2000 Suspicion
  • 2002 Can't Look Back
  • 2007 Dirty Deal

References

External links


 
 
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Blue for You (2000 Album by John Mayall)
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