My Funny Valentine
“My Funny Valentine” is the tune every jazz student eventually points to when explaining what a line cliché actually sounds like. Rodgers and Hart wrote it in 1937 for Babes in Arms, but its real legacy in jazz is harmonic: four bars of a single minor chord, made to move by nothing more than a bass line creeping down by half step. The melody barely moves at all — which is the point, because all the drama is happening underneath it.
The opening cliché — one chord, four colors
The first four bars don’t change chord in any functional sense; they change one note of the same C minor chord, four times in a row. That’s the line cliché: a static harmony reanimated by a descending inner voice or bass line.
- Cm | Cm(maj7) | Cm7 | Cm6
- Bass line: C – B – B♭ – A
Each chord shares the same root and 5th (C and G); only the 7th (and effectively the 6th) slides down a half step at a time — B natural, then B♭, then A. This is textbook minor-major seventh behavior in motion, and it’s why the progression sounds hauntingly restless even though the roman numeral never leaves i. Coming out of that four-bar cell, the A section continues down a related path — A♭maj7 | Fm7 | Dm7♭5 | G7♭9 — landing on a minor ii–V that snaps the phrase shut without ever letting the melody do much more than sit and breathe above it.
Form: AABA with a stretched-out ending
The tune is AABA, but not the tidy 32-bar version most standards use — the final A is stretched from 8 bars to 12, giving the tune’s closing thought extra room to unwind.
- A (8 bars): the line-cliché progression above, in C minor
- A (8 bars): repeats
- B (8 bars): moves to the relative major, E♭
- A′ (12 bars): returns to C minor, then resolves into E♭ major at the very end
That A′ extension matters pedagogically — it shows that AABA is a template, not a rulebook, and that composers stretch sections to fit the phrase, not the other way around.
The bridge and the dual-key trick
The bridge trades the static minor cliché for genuine forward motion, moving through E♭ major with an ascending-then-descending shape:
- E♭maj7 | Fm7 | Gm7 | Fm7
- E♭maj7 | Fm7 | Gm7 | Fm7
Most charts move two chords per bar here, so the cell above cycles at a walking pace rather than sitting a full bar on each chord. This is a textbook use of relative-key motion — E♭ major is the relative major of C minor, sharing the same key signature, so the bridge feels like a lift in mood without ever leaving the tune’s harmonic neighborhood. Coming out of the bridge, the harmony settles back through the Dm7♭5 – G7♭9 minor ii–V that returns the tune to C minor for the final A. The tune spends most of its life in C minor but — tellingly — ends in E♭ major, not the minor key it opened in, leaving the bittersweet, suspended quality the lyric is built around.
Why the melody stays out of the way
The vocal melody hovers in a narrow range around the tonic for the first several bars, moving mostly by step. That’s not a limitation of the songwriting — it’s the whole design. A busy melody would fight the descending inner voice for the listener’s ear; a still one lets the descending bass motion read as the real “melody” of the phrase. This is a useful lesson beyond this one tune: harmonic sophistication and melodic simplicity aren’t in tension, they’re often a trade a good composer makes on purpose. It’s also why the tune rewards a light touch at the piano — rootless voicings or spare block-chord comping let the chromatic line cliché speak clearly instead of getting buried.
♫ Listen
- Chet Baker — “My Funny Valentine” (Chet Baker Sings, 1954): Baker’s thin, vulnerable vocal timbre sits almost motionless over the descending bass — the definitive demonstration of melody-as-passenger over a moving harmonic floor. This recording made the tune his signature.
- Miles Davis Quintet — “My Funny Valentine” (Cookin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet, 1957, rec. 1956): Muted trumpet and Red Garland’s sparse comping keep the line cliché exposed and unhurried; listen to how little needs to happen for the harmony to feel like it’s moving.
- Miles Davis — “My Funny Valentine: Miles Davis in Concert” (1964, live at Lincoln Center): A far more abstract reading with Herbie Hancock stretching the harmony at the edges — the line cliché stays recognizable even as the group pulls the changes apart in real time.
Related: Autumn Leaves, Analyzing a Standard, Minor Key Harmony, Reharmonization