Miley Cyrus has post-'Flowers' bloom on 'Something Beautiful': review
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Before her ninth studio album, “Something Beautiful,” arrived on Friday, Miley Cyrus had finally got her “Flowers.”

Seventeen years later, the artist formerly known for her teen-pop image in “Hannah Montana” has now matured into a 32-year-old singer who has earned recognition, including two Grammy awards, notably the prestigious Record of the Year, for her hit song “Flowers” released in 2023.

So “Something Beautiful” is something of a victory party (in the U.S.A.) for Cyrus.

Furthermore, receiving acknowledgment from industry icons like Beyoncé, with whom she collaborated on the track “II Most Wanted” from the album “Cowboy Carter,” leading to Cyrus’ third Grammy win in February, solidifies her status in the music industry.

And there’s a sense of freedom in the ambition on “Something Beautiful.”

Cyrus’ latest album “Endless Summer Vacation” marks her confident transition into a new phase of her career, emphasizing artistic growth over commercial success, showcasing her evolution as an artist beyond the confines of mainstream chart performance.

She doesn’t need to compete with the Sabrina Carpenters of the world.

Taking a cue from Beyoncé — who navigated a similar transition with her 2013 self-titled surprise album — “Something Beautiful” is a visual album that will be accompanied by a short film that will be released on June 6. And there is a cinematic scope to it with a dramatic spoken prelude and two instrumental interludes that are meant to bring a certain gravitas to it all.

But while we’ll reserve final judgment until the film, the standalone album doesn’t really need it. So just indulge Miss Miley — or use that skip button — and enjoy the rest of “Something Beautiful.”

Cyrus comes out swinging like a wrecking ball with the title track, which is one of the best things that she has ever recorded. Although it feels like it would have been an epic closer, it immediately sets a high bar for the album as she veers from D’Angelo-esque neo-soul to Pink Floyd-ish prog-rock — she has cited “The Wall” as an inspiration for this album — in a way that you would’ve never imagined that Mickey Mouse would’ve never imagined.

Indeed, there’s a genre-blurring boldness to it that conjures up Prince, who Cyrus echoes when she sings “watching the doves cry into the sunrise.”

It gets the album off to a stellar start that continues with “End of the World,” an apocalyptic, retro-‘80s bop that is part Prince — think “1999” — and part Stevie Nicks, an influence who Cyrus previously channeled on 2020’s “Midnight Sky.” Although the single hasn’t quite taken off like “Flowers” yet, it deserves to be one of the bops of summer.

Then there’s “More to Lose,” an aching breakup ballad that seems to hint at Cyrus’ bruised heart from her split with ex-husband Liam Hemsworth: “You’re looking like a a movie star in a worn-out coat/So I throw away my mind/It happens all the time,” she sings, letting you feel every bit of her pain in her signature, singular timbre.

Meanwhile, “Easy Lover” is a breezy ditty that effortlessly straddles country and pop, blues and soul. Apparently Cyrus offered the song to Beyoncé for “Cowboy Carter” before recording it herself. “Tell ‘em B,” she even ad-libs in a nod to Mrs. Carter that would have made perfect sense in a duet.

While we unfortunately don’t get another duet with Beyoncé on “Something Beautiful” — the two sounded way better together than they should have on “II Most Wanted” — Cyrus gets help from Brittany Howard and Naomi Campbell(!), respectively, on “Walk of Fame” and “Every Girl You’ve Ever Loved,” two of the electro-dance tracks in the final stretch of the album. But here, they feel like a bit of a retreat back to the dance-pop of “Endless Summer Vacation.”

You kinda wish that Cyrus had had the courage of her convictions with which she started the album. It’s as if she felt that she needed to hedge her bets.

But “Golden Burning Sun” and “Pretend You’re God” are dreamy reveries that set the blissed-out mood for summer romance. And when Cyrus ends the album with the psych-tinged ballad “Give Me Love,” you’ll be offering up just that.

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