Taylor Swift (and Us) Are Absolutely Living For Griff's "Vertigo"
Photo: Frances Beach
With no patience for coddling nor humility for empathy, Griffâs âVertigoâ provides the validity in a very crucial stop in the grieving process: anger.
The youngest winner of the Brit Awardsâ Rising Star category, UK-bred Chinese-Jamaican songstress Griff is no stranger to success and critical acclaim. Sheâs set stages alive opening up for acts like Dua Lipa and Coldplay, bridging vulnerability and euphoria with her cathartic, youthful pop. Only a few days born, this newest single has already earned over a million streams, making âVertigoâ one of Griffâs fastest rising songs yet. The artist is finding her face plastered on billboards and her voice nestling comfortably on playlists across all platforms, marking an undeniable unleveling in her emerging stardom.
Written in the English countryside, you can feel how raw skinned Griff was at the time of the songâs inception. Out of sorts and nauseated with the disappointment of her loverâs cowardice, Griff is elegantly confrontational on âVertigo.â With ridding lines like âIâm used to fixing broken things before / I thought maybe I could change you,â itâs clear why this song is so immediately resonant. Weâre all seeing ourselves in that clinging to be chosen, the performance of what we could be, and the souring of it not being enough.
âWhen someone leaves your life, you spend a lot of time asking if it was your fault. This song lists all those reasons why it could be, but itâs also about trying to reassure yourself that there was nothing you could have done to make it better. With the way it crescendos, Iâve always heard it as a bit of an emotional rollercoaster,â shares Griff. âThereâs a darkness to âVertigoâ that maybe I havenât tapped into as much before,â she continued. âItâs still major, but thereâs something quite dark and moody about it too.â
Even Taylor Swift declared herself a fan, sharing the song via Instagram story accompanied with the message âdamn griff, I love this one,â much to the songstressâ disbelief. Itâs a sobering moment when your idols acknowledge the brilliance they see in you, and with Griffâs earliest memory of music being a gifted iPod shuffle with Taylor Swiftâs Fearless downloaded, this full circle moment marks Griffâs true initiation into the pop realm at large.
Watch the "Vertigo" visualizer below: