"Cherokee" (also known as "Cherokee (Indian Love Song)") is a jazz standard written by the British composer and band leader Ray Noble and published in 1938. It is the first of five movements in Noble's "Indian Suite" (Cherokee, Comanche War Dance, Iroquois, Seminole, and Sioux Sue).[1] Due to the tune incorporating many of the chords most commonly used in jazz and the multiple key transitions of the B-section, the tune is often recommended by tutors as a core standard to learn early on in a jazz pupil's development. Notably, Charlie Parker learned the tune in his early days in all 12 keys as a training exercise.
Structure
The composition has a 64-bar AABA construction.[1] The A-section harmony is straightforward by the standards of 1930s songs, but the B-section is more sophisticated.[2]: 84 This is because "it cadences (via ii-7–V7–I progressions) into the keys of B Major, A Major and G Major before moving toward the B♭ tonic."[2]: 85
The difficulty of improvising on the harmony of the B-section meant that many early soloists avoided doing so.[2]: 84
Influence
Due to the tune incorporating many of the chords most commonly used in jazz and the multiple key 2-5-1 transitions of the B-section, the tune is often recommended by tutors as a core standard to learn early on in a jazz pupil's development. Charlie Parker famously learned the tune in all 12 keys during his early development to learn how to play, though embarrassed himself when starting in jazz because he had spent so much time on practicing Cherokee that his playing was inept when trying to solo over other tunes. While playing "Cherokee", he said that "I found that by using the higher intervals of a chord as a melody line and backing them with appropriately related changes, I could play the thing I'd been hearing."[4] Parker used this song for the basis of his 1945 composition "Ko-Ko",[1] which has a partially improvised head and the chords based on the changes of "Cherokee".[5]
Cherokee also formed the basis of Buddy DeFranco's "Swinging the Indian".[1]
A vocalese version, based on the same chord sequence but with a different tune and lyrics, was written by Richie Cole and David Lahm in 1983 and is called "Harold's House of Jazz".