So I’ve been playing a lot again, since, (I suspect like many of you) I’ve got not much else to do besides try to force myself to write Fortran code.
My wrist motion is coming along pretty nicely, but I’ve found I can’t consistently nail outside ascending string changes. So I went back to basic roll patterns, dug up some old etudes, and I find they get a bit tiring after a while. Here’s one:
And here’s another, which may sound a bit familiar
What’s weird is that I have a pretty natural and (I’d like to think) fluid forearm-driven technique from the olden days:
But I can’t seem to merge the two (despite yes, having watched the Crosspicking with the Wrist and Forearm broadcast) and get any speed out of it. Here’s an example of scalar playing (with better light and a lighter pick for contrast):
And an example of the two different tremolos I’ve got, both of which feel pretty smooth (and I think they’re probably fast enough, lol):
The issue I’m having is in merging the rotational mechanic with enough of a DSX motion to play outside ascending string changes without either doing a “DWPS” style swipe (yes, I know that terminology is deprecated) or ghosting the note entirely (the former when I’m using more rotation, and the latter when I’m trying to use a 2-o’clock motion). Any general form hints here? (inb4 “this looks great, what’s the problem?” ) It seems to me the problem stems partly from having too many different things that “just work.”
Apologies for the lack of amp sound: my tube head is broken so I’m running a Scarlett Solo into Guitarix on my Ubuntu laptop, and have no way of getting the output to my phone right now.
Addendum: One more crosspicking etude, this time from a different angle. I think I’ve clocked myself doing 16ths at 150+ on this one, although the accents make it tricky to tell. The red light syndrome is real on this one.