A versatile Finnish musician, songwriter, and visual artist best known as the lead guitarist for influential glam metallers
Hanoi Rocks,
Andy McCoy has been a working musician since the late 1970s. Although frontman
Michael Monroe was the focal point of the group's live shows,
McCoy was their musical heart and soul, as he penned or co-penned just about every original song that appeared on a
Hanoi Rocks album from 1981 to 1984 (their "classic" period). After the band ceased operations in 1985,
McCoy kept busy with projects like
Suicide Twins,
Cherry Bombz,
Shooting Gallery, and Grease Helmet. His solo releases include
Too Much Ain't Enough (1988), Building on Tradition (1995), and Jukebox Junkie (2022).
Born Antti Hulkko on October 11, 1962, in Pelkosenniemi, Finland, both
McCoy's guitar playing and fashion style can be linked to two specific all-time rock & roll greats,
Keith Richards and
Johnny Thunders. Beginning in the late '70s,
McCoy appeared on several singles by the group
Briard, before signing on with the Finnish band
Pelle Miljoona Oy. Around this time, he hooked up with
Monroe, and shortly thereafter,
Hanoi Rocks was born. An influential yet oft-overlooked band, the party-hearty
Hanoi Rocks adopted the
New York Dolls' make-up and hairspray look and played anthemic three-chord rock (influenced by punk). This approach would later be adopted by such groups as
Mötley Crüe on their first few albums, and then streamlined and copied by hordes of subsequent hair metal bands throughout the '80s. During their early-'80s peak,
McCoy and
Hanoi Rocks released a total of four studio albums, including 1981's
Bangkok Shocks, Saigon Shakes, Hanoi Rocks, 1982's
Oriental Beat, 1983's
Back to the Mystery City, and 1984's
Two Steps from the Move (the latter produced by
Bob Ezrin). However, what appeared to be a bright future for the band was abruptly extinguished when
Hanoi Rocks drummer Razzle was killed in an auto accident on December 8, 1984, when he was a passenger in a car driven by
Mötley Crüe singer
Vince Neil, who was driving while under the influence.
McCoy and
Monroe would attempt to continue
Hanoi Rocks, but eventually split up the band in 1985. Afterwards,
McCoy would go from project to project, including reuniting with
Hanoi Rocks bandmate
Nasty Suicide in
the Suicide Twins, forming the heavy metal group
Shooting Gallery, releasing solo albums, and even briefly serving as a touring guitarist for
Iggy Pop. By 2001,
McCoy and
Monroe had reconnected and decided to launch a new version of
Hanoi Rocks, which resulted in several more albums before they broke up in 2009. That same year saw
McCoy pen an autobiography, Sheriff McCoy: Outlaw Legend of Hanoi Rocks.
He remained busy throughout the 2010s, touring and recording with Grease Helmet,
Pelle Miljoona, and Bam Margera, and issuing the solo albums Soul Satisfaction (2018) and 21st Century Rocks (2019). In 2022, he released Jukebox Junkie, a set of eclectic covers of songs by the likes of
Toots & The Maytals,
David Bowie,
Squeeze, and
Wanda Jackson. ~ Greg Prato & James Christopher Monger