Thanks for the clarification, and sorry I made you repeat stuff you already wrote!
Well, let’s say this is a multi-layered problem
A couple reasons why we usually get people started on single escape motions (off the top of my head):
- Tremolo-ing fast on a single note is a very simple instruction to give, and very likely to lead to the discovery of at least one fast motion
- Pretty much 100% of the time, such fast motion is single escape
- We think it’s important that players experience what it feels like to “play fast correctly”. Single-escape licks tend to have the highest hit-rate and are more likely to lead to this experience of “correctness”.
- the same experience of correctness should be sought when learning more “complicated” picking motions (mixed escapes and whatnot)
- Side note: even the best “crosspickers” (e.g. Andy Wood) tend to default to single escape when they play at their fastest. Therefore, it appears they still have a single-escape foundation underneath all their fancy double-escape patterns :D.
- Side Note 2: Molly Tuttle may be an outlier here as IIRC she is double-escaping pretty much every pickstroke in her interview!
That being said, if a player is interested in double escape stuff (Tumeni Notes, banjo rolls & whatnot), they should definitely pursue that too!
EDIT: @Maboroshi this just gave me a weird idea. I know you spent quite a lot of time experimenting with single-string tremolos and single-escape licks. Since you still feel stuck, why not go wild and try something like a fast banjo roll? Again, in this case forget about accuracy, you just want to try and do a very rough version of the motion at tempo. Even if you don’t get a clean banjo roll out of this, I wonder if this might give you the opportunity to experiment with a wider range of motion (since you have to cover multiple strings). Do I remember correctly that your tremolo motion stayed very close to the string at all times, and eventually would get stuck on it?
EDIT2: another option along the same lines (wider range of motion) is to try and do a 2-string tremolo (basically a mini-strum).
Let me know what you think!
By the way, the discussion of advantages / disadvantages of different tempos for “learning double escape” is definitely an interesting one, we can create a separate thread for that [I’ll do it later unless someone opens it first]