🌊 About the Song
Released in 2013, Riptide came out of nowhere — a quirky little folk-pop tune from an Australian ex–footy player with a ukulele and a cracked grin. Within months, it was everywhere.
It’s catchy but offbeat — a jumble of odd references (Michelle Pfeiffer, dentists, movie queens), somehow tied together by that unforgettable rhythm and Vance Joy’s charmingly nervous delivery.
He said it’s a song about fear and attraction — being pulled into something you can’t resist, like a riptide.
It’s one of those tracks that made the ukulele cool again. Raw, simple, emotional — the exact sweet spot of indie pop.
🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips
- Chords:Am – G – C – F.
- Verse & Chorus loop: Am – G – C – F (all the way through).
- Strumming pattern: Punchy and syncopated — Down–Down–Up–Down–Up around 100 bpm.
Keep the rhythm tight; it’s all about that bounce. - Tone: Play mid-neck for warmth, using nail edge for bright accents.
- Dynamics: Keep the verses light, lift into the choruses.
- Optional intro riff: Add it if you want to mimic the studio version’s hook.
A|------0-2-3-2-0------|
E|--0-1-----------1-0--|
C|---------------------|
G|---------------------|
- Sing tip: Don’t over-polish — lean into the slightly anxious energy.
🧠 Trivia You Can Drop Casually
- Vance Joy wrote it in Melbourne on his sofa, calling it “the first song that felt like me.”
- It won ARIA Song of the Year (2014) and went 10× Platinum in Australia.
- “Riptide” is still one of the most-played songs on ukulele worldwide.
- The lyric “I swear she’s destined for the screen” is about his real-life crush who left to study acting.
🌈 Final Word
Play Riptide like you’re running barefoot down a beach at dusk — slightly clumsy but grinning all the way.
Keep your strum driving, your voice honest, and don’t be afraid to let it wobble.
If your foot’s not tapping by the first chorus, check for a pulse — you might already be swept out to sea. 🌊






