Cherokee Highway

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ReleasedFebruary 20, 1995 (1995-02-20)[1]
Length4:45
"Cherokee Highway"
Single by Western Flyer
from the album Western Flyer
ReleasedFebruary 20, 1995 (1995-02-20)[1]
GenreCountry[2]
Length4:45
LabelStep One (US)
Royalty (CAN)
Songwriters
  • Danny Myrick
  • Tony Wood
Producers
Western Flyer singles chronology
"She Should've Been Mine"
(1994)
"Cherokee Highway"
(1995)
"Friday Night Stampede"
(1995)

"Cherokee Highway" is a song by American country music band Western Flyer. It was released in 1995 as the third single off the band's self-titled debut album. Lead singer Danny Myrick co-wrote the song with Tony Wood, and the band co-produced the song with Ray Pennington.

"Cherokee Highway" is a song about racial unrest in a fictional town in Mississippi in 1961.[3] The song begins describing the friendship between two boys: a black one named Willie and a white one named Kevin. After Willie's father dies at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan, Kevin asks his father to help, only to discover that his father is one of the Klansmen. Kevin's father's house is then burned down in an act of revenge and Willie enters in an attempt to rescue him, only for both of them to die in the fire.[2][1] During the chorus, lead vocalist Danny Myrick sings "The blood still runs down Cherokee Highway" in reference to the acts of violence.[3][2]

History

Danny Myrick wrote the song with Tony Wood. Myrick told the Wilkes-Barre Times Leader that he "wanted to make sure it was bold, but without sounding like a sermon".[3] He also told the publication that the song's inspiration came from acts of racial disputes that he saw in his hometown of Pascagoula, Mississippi.[3] The Deseret News writer Shirley Jinkins also cited the song as an example of social activism in country music at the time, contrasting it with the themes of domestic violence in Martina McBride's "Independence Day", recovering from alcoholism in Collin Raye's "Little Rock", and HIV/AIDS in Reba McEntire's "She Thinks His Name Was John".[2] At the time of the song's release, Martin Luther King Jr.'s widow Coretta Scott King invited the band to perform it at the Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday Bash in Atlanta, Georgia.[2] Western Flyer also performed the song at the Country Radio Seminar in Nashville, Tennessee in February 1995.[1] A music video for the song (directed by Greg Crutcher[4]) was filmed on February 6 and 7, 1995; preceding the song's release to radio on February 20.[1]

Critical reception

Chart performance

References

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