I use a Epson flatbed scanner and due to it's low dmax it can't penetrate the shadows very well. If my subject is wearing black, it has a tough time picking up dark details and usually bunches everything into black mush
Other posters gave you great information already but I may add that what I quoted above applies to positive slides, not negatives.
If, while scanning a negative, the scanner cannot "see" any details in the shadows of the positive image, this is mainly because your negative is underexposed.
There is a myth out there making people think that the scanner software can control the way the scanner will physically scan what it has to scan.
But the scanner software, if you use it so, will just modify (and, most of the times, badly deteroriate, with the exception of the multi-passes allowed by Nikon Scan and certain models of Coolscan scanners) the digital file created by the machine + software suite. The scanner is a peripheric machine plugged into a computer. It is here to make a digital file off an analog document thanks to the associated software which is here to allow the computer to drive the peripheric machine and nothing more. All you have to do while scanning is to generate a digital file which contains the most information at the best digital sampling ratio. Which means you absolutely must set the scanner software to TIFF with no compression whatsoever and at 16bits per channel with a full linear histogram.
Then if you look at the file created by the scanner on you screen you must see exactly the same thing as what you see when looking at the negative put on the luminous table.
Then you save the file, close the scanner software, and open and post-process the file in PhotoShop which is the only software which should be used for post-processing digital files created with a scanner because of the high quality of its algorithms (if the discontinued Nikon Scan software was actually a clone of PhotoShop, that wasn't for no reason).
Even the simple negative/positive job will deteriorate the file if done with the scanner software sometimes. With some scanners softwares, you also must scan the black and white negatives as RGB files not to lose any information - then you keep one layer only in PhotoShop. This was very well explained on Markus Hartel's website some years ago.
As discussed in some other threads, Tri-X isn't a genuine 400 film any longer. It must be exposed at 250 if you want to develop it in standard compensating developers like D76 or X-Tol.
Bottom line : for scanning 35mm films, a dedicated film scanner is a must-have. Even the modest Minolta Dual Scan II (real 2820 dpi resolution and excellent Dmax) which can be bought for less than $100 off the second hand market nowadays will blow away any Epson flatbed, even the V750 etc. The only caveat of this remarkable machine (the same with the Dual Scan III and Dual Scan IV) is that the sensor is slightly smaller than 24x36 so you can't create the "HCB black borders" when scanning. If those borders are mandatory you must go for a Nikon Coolscan IV or V and file down the SA-21 film carrier window a bit, which is very easy to do.