Going Wild in the Country

ukulele chords go wild in the country

🐒 About the Song

Going Wild in the Country” is pure, beautiful chaos — part tribal anthem, part shopping detox, part teenage rebellion.

Released in 1981, it was the sound of post-punk meeting the jungle drum. Bow Wow Wow, formed by ex-Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren, were a riot of percussion, surf guitar, and attitude — fronted by the teenage dynamo Annabella Lwin.

The song’s about escaping the neon grime of consumer life — “I don’t like you / I don’t need you” — and running headfirst into the wild.

It’s tongue-in-cheek, anti-establishment, and infectiously fun.

On ukulele, it morphs into a punk-folk rally cry — bouncy, percussive, and perfect for a sweaty singalong with a grin.


🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips

We’ll play it in D major, which keeps the bright bite and easy voicings.

You’ll need D, G, A, and Bm.

Verse progression: [D] – [G] – [A] – [D]

Chorus: [Bm] – [G] – [A] – [D]

Tempo: 140–150 bpm — fast, punchy, full of energy.

Strumming pattern: down–down–up–chuck–up–down–up

Add percussive palm mutes or body taps between bars to mimic the tribal drumming.

If you’ve got a low-G uke, use that bass note to drive the rhythm — it’ll sound wicked.

To keep it authentic, try alternating full strums with quick single-note flicks on the top string — that surf-punk snap cuts through beautifully.

Singing tip: Channel your inner brat.

Annabella Lwin doesn’t croon — she declares.

Half talk, half shout, totally confident.

If you’re not grinning by the second chorus, you’re doing it wrong.


💡 Trivia You Can Drop Casually

  • Annabella Lwin was only 14 when the band formed — she was literally discovered singing in a dry cleaner’s.
  • The song’s percussive sound was inspired by Burundi drumming — McLaren lifted actual tribal beats for early demos.
  • Bow Wow Wow also popularised the cassette single (“cassingle”) with their song C·30 C·60 C·90 Go!
  • “Going Wild in the Country” hit #7 on the UK Singles Chart in 1982.
  • The band’s fashion, music, and attitude heavily influenced later acts like Adam Ant and No Doubt.

🌈 Final Word

“Going Wild in the Country” is freedom with a wink — escape as performance art.

On ukulele, it’s all rhythm, laughter, and cheeky rebellion.

It’s not about perfect tone; it’s about energy.

Play it fast, stomp your foot, and shout that chorus like you just quit your day job and bought a tent

Album:See Jungle! See Jungle! Go Join Your Gang Yeah, City All Over! Go Ape Crazy!Year:1981Artist:Key:DDifficulty:Intermediate Download PDF
Song Sheet (PDF)
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