Re: early Yngwie appreciation
His vibrato is probably the most impressive thing about him, IMHO. Total mastery of it-- he just squeezes so much emotion out of the guitar. I agree too about the slower more melodic stuff. "Forever One" off of Seventh Sign had some great dramatic slower playing mixed in with his usual great soloing. Right up there with "Dreaming" from Odyssey.
I'm only a casual Yngwie listener but enjoy his early stuff; his approach to the instrument was certainly different back in the day. Since I like Baroqe music, and the way tonalities are built up and resolved, I appreciate his usage of similar musical ideas. His vibrato is one of the best out there, imo, you know it's him straight away.
I do wish he'd play more slow, melodic stuff though; on the occasions he does, like the piece 'Marching Out', it's great. I think he does himself a disservice by being shreddy all the time. Yet, when you watch him play, there's no denying he rocks hard and is seeking to squeeze every ounce of music out of his Strat.
His vibrato is probably the most impressive thing about him, IMHO. Total mastery of it-- he just squeezes so much emotion out of the guitar. I agree too about the slower more melodic stuff. "Forever One" off of Seventh Sign had some great dramatic slower playing mixed in with his usual great soloing. Right up there with "Dreaming" from Odyssey.