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"As a leading voice on the music scene in Austin, TX, guitarist Monte Montgomery slowly gained
national recognition for his amazing dexterity, fluid harmonics, percussive dynamics, and melodic
sensibility. Montgomery won his seventh consecutive title as best acoustic guitarist at the 2004 Austin
Music Awards at the SXSW Festival. Songs written by Montgomery all focus on storytelling, a quality
he derived from listening to Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt, and Bob Montgomery tours nationally,
performing songs loosely based on his experiences or gathered from his understanding of and observations
of other people. Montgomery's sandy voice and rapid fingerpicking gained him comparisons to Mark
Knopfler and Bruce Cockburn, but his true heritage lay in the tradition of Texas guitarists B.W. Stevenson,
Shake Russell, and Guy Clark, whom he discovered in his youth. National acclaim started to come his way
after appearances on PBS music television shows, such as Austin City Limits, CD Highway, and Texas Music
Cafe. His growing talents as a guitarist and songwriter came from the understanding of melody and
rhythm he gained from hearing pop icons Lindsay Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac, Stevie Wonder, and the
Neville Brothers. Montgomery's journey to guitar stardom started in the Hill Country hamlet near
Fredericksburg, TX, where his mom (Maggie Montgomery, herself a folk-country singer and guitarist in
Luckenbach, TX) let him strum her guitar while she fingered the chords. Montgomery lived out of the back
of his mother's pickup for a while. He played for tips and paid a lot of dues early in his career. He and his
mother used to hang out at the Kerrville Folk Festival in Texas where they met a lot of songwriters. David
Montgomery, his dad, factored into his development, too. Monte Montgomery was born in Birmingham,
AL, where his father, a choir director, took him to church and introduced him to gospel singers. A lot of his
apprenticeship during the '80s took place in San Antonio, where he honed his skills by performing cover
songs in cafes and honky-tonks. He commuted to Austin to perform his original songs. Before long, he
became a mainstay on the music scene there. After signing with Heart Music to record his first two CDs,
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