I'm going live tomorrow at approx. 09:00 p.m. GMT. I'll answer your questions about the studio version of Sultans Of Swing by Dire Straits, questions about my version of the guitar part from this song, and give an update on my plans, life, and music teaching work which I finally started doing. Pavel.
P.S. Today is the 15th anniversary of my YouTube channel. I registered there quite early but never uploaded regularly until the end of 2016, so technically it’s only 6 years old.
On the twiddly bits in Sultans, here's a short Michael Britt comment about it that I recently found by accident.
https://youtu.be/JEzvCCbwYj8?t=1164
Thank you for bringing some activity into this thread which seems to be filled exclusively with my own posts
Right now I'm teaching people online in private lessons and you simply can't imagine the amount of aha's and wow's my fellow guitar players get in discovering all the little details and hidden gems in Mark's playing. I will never get tired of revealing, learning, or relearning them. And I'm learning all the time! And NOTHING is obvious.
Speaking of twiddly bits, it's quite interesting that people assume it's a "triplet thing" when in reality it's just four 16th notes, no triplets. The fact that it has a pull-off in the beginning forces you to pick only three notes and hence everybody assumes it's a triplet, I guess. So it is a triplet, but not a proper one.
I think Michael thought the right-hand picking went something like this: middle - pull-off - thumb - index. Or index - pull-off - thumb - middle. Which is remarkably awkward to play, and can only be done with three fingers. And if you try to do it with just two fingers, it's straight-up impossible to play starting with an upstroke, so he definitely overthought this a bunch. Because it forces one to play two notes in a row with one finger, either thumb or index, which is too hard to execute, too slow and takes up too much energy.
Mark's approach to playing twiddly bits is in fact the most economic, effortless, rational, logical, beautiful, and consistent way to do it, can't even compare with playing it with a pick. But after all, he came up with it.