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The 40-Minute Routine

This is your practice blueprint for Level 5. The goal at this stage isn't just to learn more exercises — it's to start sounding like a musician.

That means cleaner phrasing, stronger rhythm, more confident improvisation, and learning to play through mistakes rather than stopping every time one happens.

Consistency four days a week will do more for your playing than a two-hour Sunday session every couple of weeks. Here's exactly how I want you to spend your time.

Warm-Up — 5 mins

  • X's up the fretboard (Joe Satriani exercise) — finger independence, pinky strength, alternate picking

  • Work lower toward the nut as you improve — that's where the stretch challenge is

  • 3-finger hammer-on and pull-off combinations: 3-2-1, 4-3-1, 4-3-2, and any combo using the little finger


Chromatic Exercise — 5 mins

  • 2-octave chromatic exercise — alternate picking, even timing, pinky accuracy

  • Run it ascending and descending, from different starting frets

  • Use it as a progress tracker — come back to it weekly and measure your improvement


Pentatonic Superhighway — 10 mins

  • Split between E minor and A minor pentatonic superhighways

  • Practise full ascending and descending shapes

  • Focus on one long diagonal shape across the neck — not separate boxes

  • Work on sliding transitions between positions


Scale Work — 10 mins

  • Natural minor scale (shape 1) — two octaves up and down, name the scale degrees as you go

  • Improvise over an A minor backing track using only natural minor notes — no retreating to the pentatonic

  • Major scale (shape 1) — four clean repetitions without a mistake before moving on


Bend Intonation — 10 mins

  • Use a tuner

  • Play the target note first, then bend up to it and check the tuner

  • Whole-step bends, bend and release, holding bends steady — all must be in tune

  • Out-of-tune bends are the biggest thing separating intermediate players from players who sound good


Theory and Ear Training Bonus — 5–10 mins

  • Identify intervals within the major scale: root, major 2nd, major 3rd, perfect 4th, perfect 5th, major 6th, major 7th, octave

  • Bounce between the root, using it as an anchor, and any other interval to hear it in context

  • Sing them if you can

  • Intervals connect scales, chords, and melodies — the more familiar they sound, the faster everything clicks

Next Up: Song Recommendations - Int Elec Level 5

Well done! Let's jump into the next video of the course.

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