Tico Zamora began playing guitar at an early age. Starting at the age of eight, he received daily guitar lessons from his father, Torcuato Zamora, Sr., an accomplished
flamenco guitarist from
Almeria, Spain. After five years of apprenticeship with his father, at age 13, the young Zamora bought his first electric guitar, a
Fender Stratocaster. Zamora was greatly influenced by his older sister's record collection, which included bands such as
Led Zeppelin,
Jimi Hendrix,
The Beatles and
Aerosmith. Through countless hours of playing along with and emulating what he heard on those seminal records, he discovered his passion for the electric guitar. Too young to play in nightclubs, his first performance was at a
Battle of the Bands in a local Washington, D.C. area game room where he won the competition. Shortly thereafter, he was asked to join
H.R. ("Human Rights"), fronted by Paul Hudson, lead singer of the influential hardcore punk band
Bad Brains. This was 16-year-old Zamora's introduction to the world of
punk rock. After touring and recording in the studio with
H.R. for two years, H.R.'s former band,
Bad Brains, went back into the studio with its original band members and released a new album,
I Against I. In 1987, Zamora moved to
Athens, Georgia to start a new band, Gypsy Cab Company, and immerse himself in the thriving
alternative rock and
new wave music scene. Two years later,
Maureen Tucker, drummer for
The Velvet Underground, asked Zamora to play guitar with her in the opening act for
Lou Reed on his
New York tour across the U.S. and Canada. In 1990, Zamora played guitar in Mo Tucker's band and toured throughout many cities in Europe, including
Berlin, Germany, where Zamora lived from 1991 to 2009. In Berlin, Zamora set up a recording studio and played with and produced many bands, some of which were part of the exploding
electropop/
electroclash music scene occurring in Berlin in the early 2000s. ==Credits==