In this video
Every song on this list is here for a reason. Once you're comfortable with the exercises in the practice routine, start swapping that practice time for songs that work on the same things — because applying technique to real music is what locks it in for good. Here's how I'd approach it.
Pentatonic Superhighway and Fretboard Navigation
E minor pentatonic:
Purple Haze — Jimi Hendrix
Hey Joe — Jimi Hendrix
Voodoo Child — Jimi Hendrix
A minor pentatonic:
Black Dog — Led Zeppelin
Stairway to Heaven — Led Zeppelin
Pick the one that excites you most and go deep on that first — you don't need to learn all five.
Bending, Intonation, and Phrasing
I Won't Back Down — Tom Petty - easiest starting point
Gravity — John Mayer
Comfortably Numb — Pink Floyd - benchmark
Another Brick in the Wall — Pink Floyd - benchmark
David Gilmour is the gold standard for this style — working on either Pink Floyd solo will push your lead playing forward faster than almost anything else at this level.
Natural Minor Scale in Action
Do I Wanna Know? — Arctic Monkeys - clearest example
505 (lead parts) — Arctic Monkeys
While My Guitar Gently Weeps — The Beatles
Zombie (descending section) — The Cranberries
The Trooper — Iron Maiden
Harmonic Minor
Crying Lightning — Arctic Monkeys
Plug In Baby — Muse
Both are modern and accessible — the raised seventh is unmistakable once you know what to listen for.
Chromatic Technique
Born to Run — Bruce Springsteen - headline example
When You Were Young — The Killers
Metallica chromatic down-picking riffs - for heavier playing
Pick three or four songs from across these categories, learn them properly, and keep your favourites from previous levels in rotation alongside them. When you're confident with those, I'll see you at Level 6.
Intermediate Electric Level 5
Recommended Songs
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