Hey Joe! Goooooood Moooooooooorrrrrnin’!
My opinion on DSX/USX is that they are two sides of the same coin, kind of mirror images of each other and for each advantage, there is an opposing ummm “constraint”. I think that we, as guitarists tend to base what it is that we want to do off of what other players are doing. Yngwie and Eric are USX guys so @$#@##$@% I would sure like to sound like them - at first glance, the obvious path to owning their vocabulary is to mimic their setups. And I think a lot of folks kind of ignore what is right in front of them and chase after something that doesn’t come as naturally in respect to the physical execution.
Funny story, I was talking a lot with a guy here on the forums and he was pretty much like “Oh jeez, bro - rough luck being dealt THOSE cards…” (I am paraphrasing). I think we all form opinions based on our experiences (successes and failures) I am no different, that’s for sure. This whole experience over the last 8 or so months has really opened my eyes. So yeah, I have a loose opinion that maybe DSX is viewed as less desireable… Not that it matters, because I am doing it, no regrats! hahaha
My elbow playing. That’s interesting because I could play all my stuff starting on a downstroke or an upstroke particularly on 3nps stuff. I used a LOT of sweep stuff, and it worked not too bad but it was extremely difficult to control the rhythm. I think that I was able to recognize what worked and then I adapted the musical phrases to suit a very limited ability to execute. Tons of sweeping and legato, systematic swiping and an absolutely nasty background tension; I was actually working against that setup’s strengths a lot of the time.
Knowing what I know now, I would approach elbow very differently!
As far as vocabulary goes, that’s something that has changed quite radically with my setup. Single string stuff, that’s the same - legato and tap, I take that with me, hybrid picked and fingers I keep, but sweeping is really different now. That will need to be revisited. It feels like if I want to be good at sweeping a la Gambale or Harrison I need to develop a USX as well. It feels like ascending lines that incorporate a sweep are a bit weaker, whereas descending lines with a sweep are a bit smoother and rhythmically “better seated” if that makes sense.
But yeah, as far as alternate picking goes with my DSX setup it’s been a kind of “start from scratch” sort of situation just to get a vocabulary and line construction that jives musically with whatever else i am doing. hahaha When I am making mistakes or hiccups it’s because my age-addled brain has run out of RAM trying to process what I want to do!
(edit/add) This criteria list has been helpful in determining if a thing I do cuts the mustard…
- Efficient muscular activation against low background tension.
- Strong connection to internal clock.
- High dynamic range.
- The facility to reliably escape in at least one direction.
- Tracking capability across all six strings.