In this video
E and A are the two most guitar-friendly keys, and at Level 5 you need the superhighway in both. The A minor pentatonic superhighway follows exactly the same diagonal logic as the E minor version — one connected shape running across the fretboard from the lowest A to the highest, rather than a series of disconnected box shapes stitched together. What makes this more than just a repeat exercise is the way the A minor shape connects to other things you already know: the slide that moves you into the upper extension you've likely used before, the House of Blues shape at the top, and — crucially — the fact that the same shape is also C major pentatonic. That overlap is one of the most important things to understand about pentatonic playing at this level.
What you will learn:
• The full A minor pentatonic superhighway from the 5th fret to the upper register
• The slide that connects the lower and upper parts of the shape
• The relationship between A minor pentatonic and C major pentatonic
• Led Zeppelin song references that use this shape in action
• How to think about the superhighway as one connected diagonal rather than separate box shapes
Top songs
Led Zep: Black Dog and Stairway solo (start)
All Along the Watchtower" – Jimi Hendrix: Hendrix heavily used position 4 and connected it to others in the A minor key to build his solo, making it a masterclass in pentatonic flow
More pentatonic based solos in other keys (same Pentatonic highway shape)
"Hotel California" – The Eagles (Don Felder/Joe Walsh): The extended outro solo seamlessly moves between positions of the B minor pentatonic scale, featuring melodic runs that span multiple positions.
"You Shook Me All Night Long" – AC/DC (Angus Young): A perfect example of "superhighway" soloing, it blends G minor and major pentatonic, focusing on fluid, fast movements between positions.
"Crossroads" – Cream (Eric Clapton): Known for his blues-rock prowess, Clapton moves quickly across the fretboard using different boxes of the minor pentatonic scale, particularly in A minor.
"Black Magic Woman" – Santana (Carlos Santana): Santana is a master of phrasing within the minor pentatonic, often expanding his reach across the neck.
The Full Shape
Starts at the A note on the 5th fret of string 6
Index and ring finger throughout
The Slide
The slide from 7th to 9th fret on the A string is the pivot point of the whole shape — same role as in the E minor version
It should feel like a smooth continuation of the phrase, not a gear change
The note you land on after the slide must ring at the same volume and tone as the notes either side — if it's quieter or unclear, the slide needs more work
A Minor Pentatonic and C Major Pentatonic
They are the same notes — the difference is which note you treat as home
This is why the Oasis solo in Don't Look Back in Anger (C major) uses the exact same shape as an A minor run
This principle — relative major and minor sharing the same notes — is one of the key insights into how professional players think about the fretboard
Led Zeppelin References
A is Led Zeppelin's key of choice — Black Dog and Stairway to Heaven are the primary examples at this level
Both solos use the A minor pentatonic superhighway across a wide fretboard range
Stairway uses the upper extension extensively in the final solo section
Knowing the superhighway gives you the framework to approach these songs intelligently rather than learning the notes in isolation
Thinking in Diagonal Connections
Box shapes are a useful starting point but limit how far you can take a phrase
The shift the superhighway teaches: not which box am I in, but which direction am I going and how do these shapes link together
Once you can navigate the A minor superhighway fluidly, you're thinking the way the fretboard actually works — one continuous surface, not a grid of separate sections
Intermediate Electric Level 5
Recommended Songs
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