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Question of the Month: 6-String Movie Scenes

We round up actor Boyd Holbrook, who plays Johnny Cash in A Complete Unknown, to discuss our favorite guitar scenes on the big screen.

Question of the Month: 6-String Movie Scenes

Boyd Holbrook is a fan of “Dueling Banjos.”

Photo by Leo Jacob

Question: What’s your favorite guitar scene in a movie?

Guest Picker
Boyd Holbrook



Boyd Holbrook is a fan of “Dueling Banjos.”Photo by Leo Jacob

A:Deliverance. The dueling guitar and banjo scene for me is the most eerie and unique scene ever in a movie. What a wicked movie. Everyone always thinks the film is set in Kentucky. It comes up a lot once people know I’m from Kentucky, but it’s set in Georgia. Maybe it’s the banjo that reminds people of Kentucky.

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Obsession: I’m obsessed with open-C and open-G tunings right now with Travis-style picking. You can pop and pull all sorts of stuff. My guitar coach, the great Bret Boyer who got me spun up to play Johnny Cash, keeps on blowing my mind with new styles. I think next we’re gonna crack how R.L. Burnside played his sound. That one for me is sacred.

Matthew Wang is a Nigel Tufnel fan!

Reader of the Month

Matthew Wang

A: I love Crossroads with Steve Vai and the guitar scenes in the first Back To The Future movie, but I think Nigel Tufnel doing his Rig Rundown in This Is Spinal Tap is the greatest guitar scene in film. It made me want a Les Paul. For the sustain!

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IK Multimedia’s powerful tone-generating machine.

Obsession: I’m really loving IK Multimedia’s TONEX and u-he’s Zebrify. In terms of other hardware I really want an Industrialelectric RM-1N pedal to make some drones. I’m also obsessively watching video demos of Old Blood Noise Endeavors pedals and really want to get some soon, in particular the BL-44 Reverse.

Our John Bohlinger is a fan of the devil’s guitar player—as portrayed by Steve Vai.

John Bohlinger
Nashville Correspondent

A: The final guitar duel between Jack Butler (Steve Vai) and Ralph Macchio from Crossroads remains the greatest cinematic contribution to guitardom ever. The year was 1986 and Vai, fueled by incredible innate talent and the blessing of Satan, was kicking Macchio’s ass until Ralph whipped out Niccolò Paganini's Caprice No. 5. Of course, Vai played both his parts and Ralph’s Paganini part while Ry Cooder supplied the funky, swampy slide stuff. It was not a fair fight.

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Bohlinger’s current favorite plectrum

Obsession: I’ve been experimenting with different plectrums. It’s amazing how much variety you get from that one tiny ingredient. My current favorite is the V Pick Traditional.

R.L. Burnside backed by our editorial director, Ted Drozdowski.

Ted Drozdowski

Editorial Director

A: It’s the outrageous performance of “Stack-O-Lee” by Samuel Jackson inBlack Snake Moan. a greasy, nasty nod to ’60s/early ’70s exploitation movies. Jackson’s character, Lazarus Redd, is loosely based on my old friend and mentor R.L. Burnside, and while Redd’s foul-mouthed, murderous rap is totally gangster, the music is authentic Mississippi hill-country blues, anchored by R.L.’s old family rhythm section of his grandson Cedric Burnside on drums and “adopted son” Kenny Brown on guitar. And the juke joint atmosphere is thicker than an alligator’s hide.

Obsession: Amps! Again! Recent guests have included a Friedman Plex, StewMac’s upcoming Valve Factory 18, and an Orange O Tone 40. Just plugging in and cranking up is too much fun!