Until recently, Miley Cyrus wasnât the kind of artist that immediately brought to mind serious rockânâroll pipes â responsible for the demolition-level ballad âWrecking Ballâ, sugary ode-to-molly âWe Canât Stopâ and the almost hideously catchy âParty in the U.S.Aâ, sheâs always had an uncanny knack for spinning pure-pop gold. But with her guest appearance in Charlie Brookerâs dystopian telly series last year â and during a subsequent riff-heavy set at Glastonbury â the singer proved she can rock with the best of ’em.
On Black Mirror, her starring role as the bubblegum pop act Ashley O â famous for singing a sickly-sweet new version of Nine Inch Nailsâ brutal âHead Like A Holeâ â concluded with Cyrus performing the original in a sticky, sweat-drenched club. On the Pyramid Stage, she covered heavy-weights like Led Zeppelin and Metallica. Everyone loves a curveball cover or two â especially in a searing hot heatwave, and immediately after Kylie Minogueâs Legendâs Slot â but the gravelly punch of Cyrusâ voice genuinely took us aback. As she threw herself off a stack of amps, headbanging and yowling through âBlack Dogâ it revealed a different side to an artist who has sometimes been pigeonholed.
The truth is, Mileyâs always been a big old rocker at heart â and her recent cover of Blondieâs âHeart of Glassâ just scratches the surface. Get your hand-horns at the ready and dive on inâŠ
Blondie, âHeart of Glassâ (2020)
Last month at a pandemic edition iHeartRadio Music Festival, Miley opened her four-song set with a cover of âHeart and Glassâ by New York new wave pioneers Blondie. Infused with a dancefloor stomp, itâs one of the biggest hits from the groupâs breakthrough album âParallel Linesâ â and straddled the gap between rock and disco.
Mileyâs version doesnât stick rigidly to Debbie Harryâs delivery, and itâs all the better for it â instead, her take is gravelly, and charged with the merest hint of a country-rock twang. Even Blondie themselves approved â âwe think Miley Cyrus nailed it,â they tweeted afterwards. Spot on.
Why it rocked: Itâs a bold move taking on a classic this ubiquitous, but Miley made it her own
Eagles, ‘Take it to the Limit’ (2020)
When she popped into BBC Radio 1âs live lounge earlier this year, Miley picked out an eclectic pair of covers: as well as Billie Eilishâs â’My Future’, she sang âTake it to the Limitâ by LA classic-rockers Eagles. Scattered with woozy, Beach Boys-esque harmonies, the waltzy ballad eventually led to Randy Meisner quitting the band after multiple arguments about whether to perform it live. Meisner was wary of missing the high-notes â but Miley made it sound effortless.
Why it rocked: It’s not only a stunner of a performance, but a heartfelt song choice â Miley dedicated âTake it to the Limitâ to her late grandmother Mammie.
Pink Floyd, ‘Comfortably Numb’ (2019)
âI sing songs like â[We] Canât Stopâ for you, but then I sing a couple of songs for me,â Miley told the crowd at last yearâs iHeartRadio Music Festival â clearly a favoured spot for unexpected covers. The pick in question was taken from Pink Floydâs concept album âThe Wallâ. The song was inspired by Roger Watersâ memories of trying to play a show after being injected with some hardcore pain tranquilisers, and certain choice lyrics also seem to speak to Mileyâs desire to break free from the mould sheâs been put in: âI can’t explain you would not understand,â she gravels, âthis is not how I amâ
Why it rocked: That low-pitched vocal â sublime stuff.
Led Zeppelin, ‘Black Dog’ (2019)
As a searing hot heatwave beat down on Worthy Farm last summer, Miley Cyrus got an entire field headbanging, and let loose completely to Led Zeppelin’s live favourite âBlack Dogâ â roaring and yowling atop some truly dirty guitar playing. It came during a set filled with surprises.
Why it rocked: What could be more rockânâroll than the Tennessee-born musician metaphorically killing off Hannah Montana, once and for all?
Metallica, ‘Nothing Else Matters’ (2019)
That same career-defining Glastonbury set also featured Mileyâs take on Metallica â and for the occasion she plucked âNothing Else Mattersâ out of the heavy metallersâ back catalogue. Six years ago, the bandâs James Hetfield joked about liking Miley Cyrusâ music to placate his kids â by 2019, he and drummer Lars Ulrich were both on board and full of genuine praise for her massive-sounding rock vocal.
Why it rocked: What better place to show her true rockânâroll colours than the Pyramid Stage?
Nine Inch Nails, ‘Head Like A Hole’ (2019)
With her starring role in Black Mirror as Ashley O, Miley Cyrus appeared to shed some light on her own rockier leanings and desire to break out of the pure-pop mould. In the show, the pink-haired pop star sings a bubblegum version of Nine Inch Nailsâ 1989 track âHead Like A Holeâ. The garish new version switches up the songâs darker elements, and is unrelentingly positive. In the closing moments of the episode, Cyrus â as a reinvented Ashley O â performs the original version in all its doomy, menacing glory.
Why it rocked: Using Nine Inch Nailsâ anti-capitalist ode to âGod moneyâ to shed light on the way that artists are marketed is a clever move â no wonder Trent Reznor himself approved the adaptation.
Tom Petty, ‘Wildflowers’ (2017)
A few days after the death of the legendary Tom Petty, Miley Cyrus performed âWildflowersâ on the Howard Stern Show in tribute to one of her favourite artists â speaking to the host, she added that she wanted to pick out a song that felt âhopeful rather than mourningâ. Her raspy vocal couldnât be better suited to the song, and the following day she and dad Billy Ray Cyrus took the cover to The Tonight Show.
Why it rocked: Itâs a tough task taking on a Tom Petty track, but Cyrus brought the metaphorical house down with raw emotion.
Bob Dylan, ‘Baby, I’m In The Mood For You (2016)
Backed by The Roots, Miley Cyrus performed Dylanâs âBaby, Iâm in the Mood for Youâ â composed in 1962, but unreleased icon until the icon put out his 1985 record âBiographâ. Her own rendition takes noticeable inspiration from the version that the American folk and blues musician Odetta sang in 1965 â itâs a doozy of a cover.
Why it rocked: Mid-song, Cyrus snuck in a reference to host Jimmy Fallonâs infamous hair-ruffling run-in with Donald Trump â âdonât even think about messing with my hair,â she said. âIâm serious!â
Beatles, ‘Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds’ (2014)
Though Black Mirror showed the world Mileyâs rockânâroll side, sheâs been performing left-field covers for years, and the Bangerz World Tour in 2014 was jammed full of them. As well as singing her godmotherâs classic âJoleneâ and Outkastâs âHey Yaâ, the tour also featured a rendition of The Beatlesâ psychedelic âLucy In The Sky with Diamondsâ – complete with bug-esque sunglasses and a pair of teeny-boppers.
Why it rocked: Sneaking an ode to LSD in the middle of hits from âBangerzâ? Say no more.
Fleetwood Mac, ‘Landslide’ (2014)
And on the Oakland leg of the same tour, Cyrus covered âLandslideâ by Fleetwood Mac, having originally playing it live two years previously. And the similarities between her and Stevie Nicksâ vocals are obvious; theyâre the perfect match. A âDreamsâ cover album from Miley, anyone?
Why it rocked: She unapologetically puled her phone out to check the lyrics, making for a relaxed interlude in an otherwise slickly produced arena show.
Arctic Monkeys, âWhy’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?â (2014)
âThis song is called ‘Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?ââ Cyrus announced when she covered this track on her âBangerzâ tour, âand itâs a trick question, âcos Iâm always highâ. And her own version of Arctic Monkeysâ âAMâ stormer trades in riff-heavy heft for campy country Western.
Why it rocked: In a parallel universe where Alex Turner is a Red Dead Redemption cowboy, Mileyâs cover is his internal monologue.
Nirvana, ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ (2011)
Touring her 2010 album âCan’t Be Tamedâ the following year, Miley took on the grunge classic to end all grunge classics, Nirvanaâs âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ, and started a mosh pit in the most unlikely of places.
Why it rocked: At this point in her career, Miley was still playing clean-cut Disney heroine Hannah Montana, making this the perfect curveball
Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, ‘I Love RockâNâRoll’ (2011)
The influence of Joan Jett is clear on Mileyâs most recent, rock-inspired material (see last year’s EP ‘She Is Coming’), which is why itâs such a treat revisiting this early medley of Blackhearts bangers. As well as the fist-pumping âI Love RockânâRollâ, she also yowled her way through âBad Reputationâ and Jettâs solo track âCherry Bombâ.
Why it rocked: Hedonism meets killer choreo. Say no more.
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