ECARD
1/23 Tacoma, WA Jazz Bones
1/24 Port Townsend, WA Upstage
1/26 Seattle The Triple Door
1/27 Bellingham, WA Wild Buffalo House of Music
1/28 Portland, OR Roseland Grill
1/30 Corvallis, OR The Platinum Club
2/1 Sacramento, CA Torch Club
2/2 Pleasant Hill, CA Community Concert Series
2/3 San Francisco Biscuits & Blues
2/8 San Diego Humphrey's Backstage
2/9 San Juan Capistrano, CA Coach House
2/10 Arcadia, CA Arcadia Blues Club
2/15 Dallas Grenada Theatre
2/16 Austin, TX Antone's
2/17 San Antonio, TX Casbeers
2/20 Atlanta Smithes Old Bar
2/21 Tallahassee, FL Bardfordville Blues Club
2/22 St. Augustine, FL Café Eleven
2/23 Lake Worth, FL Bamboo Room
2/24 Clearwater, FL Seafood & Blues Fest
2/25 Indiatlantic, FL Lou's Blues
2/27 Montgomery, AL Capitol Oyster Bar
2/28 Charlotte, NC Double Door
3/2 Annapolis, MD Rams Head
3/3 Falls Church, VA The State Theatre
3/5 Woonsocket, RI Chan's
3/6 Woonsocket, RI Chan's
3/7 New York B.B. King Blues Club
3/9 Teaneck, NJ Mexicali Blues Café
3/10 Amagansett, NY Stephen Talkhouse
3/11 Newport, RI Newport Blues Café
3/12 Northampton, MA Iron Horse
3/14 Cambridge, MA Regattabar
3/16 Buffalo, NY The Tralf
3/18 Ferndale, MI Magic Bag Theatre
3/20 Westlake, OH The Savannah
3/21 Dayton, OH Gilly's
3/22 Berwyn, IL Fitzgeralds
3/24 Minneapolis, MN Music Café

“Smoldering blues and southern-fried rock 'n' roll with a master touch and killer soloing.”GuitarOne

GuitarOne magazine calls guitarist / vocalist COCO MONTOYA “the hottest southpaw in the blues” and raves about his “master touch and killer tone.” The Boston Globe succinctly states that Montoya’s music is “hot, blistering soul.” From his early days as a drummer to his current status as one of the top-drawing guitarists and vocalists on the blues-rock scene, Montoya earned his status through years of hard work and constant touring. And it all started with a chance meeting in the mid-1970s with legendary bluesman Albert Collins, who offered Montoya a gig as his drummer. Albert took an immediate liking to Montoya, becoming his mentor and teaching his new protégé the secrets of Collins’ “icy hot” style of blues guitar. Five years later, British blues icon John Mayall happened to catch Montoya at a jam session and was blown away. Mayall recruited him as guitarist in the legendary Bluesbreakers, and Montoya spent the next 10 years touring non-stop, proving himself to be a world-class guitar master in one of the most renowned blues bands in existence.

Since stepping out as a bandleader in 1993, Montoya released five solo albums, including 1995’s Gotta Mind To Travel (his debut, which lead to a 1996 nomination for four Blues Music Awards and a win for Best New Blues Artist), 1996’s Ya Think I’d Know Better, 97’s Just Let Go, Suspicion (his Alligator debut) and 2002’s massively popular Can’t Look Back.  All during that time, Montoya performed non-stop at clubs, concert halls and major festivals all over the world. At every show, fans’ jaws dropped, and critics raved about Montoya’s mind-bending guitar licks and fervent vocals. “The fiery blues that issue forth from Coco Montoya’s guitar are awe-inspiring and boogie requiring,” says The Village Voice. With his new album, DIRTY DEAL (joined by his friends from Little Feat), Montoya turns up the intensity with another dose of his feral, soul-stirring music.

On Dirty Deal, Montoya, along with his road-tested, red-hot touring band, once again uses blues as a blasting off point for his emotional, soulful music. With his icy-hot guitar playing and his passionate, unaffected vocals, he attacks each of the 11 songs with deep feeling and ferocious energy. Montoya’s friends, Little Feat members Paul Barerre, Kenny Gradney, Richie Hayward and Bill Payne, add their unique talents to the mix as well. Produced by Barrere and engineer Roger Cole, every song on Dirty Deal - the rockers as well as the ballads - burns from start to finish. Montoya brings all the unbridled force of his acclaimed live shows into the studio for a foot-stomping, guitar-fueled ride. Dirty Deal is Montoya’s rawest, most stripped-down and impassioned recording to date.

Coco Montoya was born in Santa Monica, California in 1951. In 1969, Montoya saw Albert King opening up a Creedence Clearwater Revival/Iron Butterfly concert and was transformed. “After Albert got done playing,” says Montoya, “My life was changed. When he played, the music went right into my soul. It grabbed me so emotionally that I had tears welling up in my eyes. Nothing had ever affected me to this level. He showed me what music and guitar playing were all about. I knew that was what I wanted to do.” By the mid-1970s, Montoya was playing drums in several local rock bands, one of which played a small Culver City, California bar on weekends. One Sunday, Albert Collins was booked to play a matinee there and the club owner gave Collins permission to use Montoya’s drums. Montoya continues the story: “I show up to pick up my equipment and I see that someone had been playing my drums and I got a little angry with the club owner. So Albert called me up at the club and was real nice and apologetic. I went down to see his show and it really just tore my head off. The thing that I had seen and felt with Albert King came pouring back on me when I saw Albert Collins.”

A few months later, Collins desperately needed a drummer for a tour of the Northwest and he called Coco. After the tour ended, Montoya remained in Collins’ band for five more years. It was during this time that Coco began doubling on guitar. And Collins went out of his way to teach him. “We’d sit in hotel rooms for hours and play guitar,” remembers Montoya. “He’d play that beautiful rhythm of his and just have me play along. He was always saying, ‘Don’t think about it, just feel it.’ He taught me to tap into an inner strength. What a great gift he gave me.” As Montoya’s guitar playing improved, his relationship with Collins kept growing. “He was like a father to me,” says Coco, who often crashed at Collins’ house. When Collins declared Montoya his “son,” it  was the highest praise and affection he could offer. In return, Montoya learned everything he could from the legendary Master of the Telecaster. As a tribute to his mentor, Montoya has cut a Collins song on every solo album he’s made.

Averaging over 150 tour dates a year, Montoya continues to pack clubs and theaters around the world. He has played major festivals, including the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, The Chicago Blues Festival, The San Francisco Blues Festival and Canada’s International Jazz Festival. It’s no coincidence that publications from The Philadelphia Daily News to Blues Revue to Living Blues to The Village Voice all rank Coco among the best guitarists and singers on the blues scene. “Montoya is at the forefront of the contemporary blues world,” declared Guitar World. “He is one of the truly gifted blues artists of his generation,” said Living Blues. With Dirty Deal and continued non-stop touring, Coco Montoya continues to share his gift with his legion of admirers all over the world.