Miley Cyrus's 'Slide Away' And The Necessity Of Emergency Breakup Bops
By Emilee Lindner
Whenever I read the headline, I did not remember to breathe. There I was, gawking at my computer without blue-light glasses (I know, dangerous), as my almost-lunchtime appetite shrunk back down to my belly.
Miley Cyrus and
Liam Hemsworth had
called it quits immediately after eight months of marriage.
While celeb breakups are as typical as your regular American home finch, for some reason I absorb them almost every time. (I'm still grieving Heidi Klum and Seal, if that tells you anything.) I soak in other people's breakups — possibly because I'm reminded that my own relationship may be mortal. That scares me. Happy endings are promised to no one. Even Miley and Liam.
So, what the hell happened? The happy couple had just
tied the knot in December right after nearly a decade of being on-again-off-again. They had already worked out their kinks, right? How could they just disregard their past? Didn't Liam show her the magic of Malibu,
like her song says? Weren't they soul mates?
Now ordinarily, like any pop star whose personalized life I'm far also entangled in, they'd answer all these questions in a new album possibly months, or per year, away. With
Taylor Swift, we had to wait three years to hear if she’s still dating that guy from
The Favourite (#BuyLoverOniTunes). Hell, the Kardashians make us wait eight months for all their stale tea on
Keeping Up. Yet not Miley. Case in point, just a couple of days right after that heartbreaking headline, Ms. Cyrus dropped a new song revealing everything.
"
Slide Away" tells the story of an ocean boy as well as a city girl phasing out of their relationship. The lyrics explain the breakup almost also accurately: "Grow up, we're not 17" (they began dating in 2009 while she was indeed 17); "Think I'm gonna miss these harbor lights" (Miley once sang about how Liam led her to the coast on 2017's "Malibu"); "Baby, we were noticed, however right now we're lost" (while they rekindled their partnership in every other, they’ve lose their sense of self). It's concise and clear.
While Liam posted a
detail-devoid statement over on his Instagram, Miley's song did the same job — nevertheless more revealing and emotionally charged. It's closure, even once we've barely had time to wallow in their separation. Even before she fired off a string of tweets
denying her infidelity, fans weren't exactly left hanging. The song mentioned it all.
At the
2019 VMAs, Miley avoided the red carpet and interviews altogether, as an alternative letting her black-and-white efficiency of "Slide Away" speak for itself. With just the right quantity of vulnerability — hair wet, legs exposed, flanked only by a line of string players — her voice exuded power and independence (a stark contrast from her romantic, teary
Billboard Music Awards performance in 2017).
In a time whenever social media makes us feel closer to well known people than we actually are, the expedited breakup song is starting to take the place of a breakup statement (or silence, for that matter). Nearly two weeks soon after Ariana Grande and Pete Davidson's whirlwind engagement ended, we got "
thank u, next" — where we learned that there was no animosity on Ariana's end; she was just "grateful" for her ex. The song spawned the swift release of
an entire LP of post-breakup tunes, free from an extended hefty rollout plan, just six months soon after her
Sweetener album. And any time Halsey and G-Eazy were dunzo, we got "
Without Me," an one-off single about a dude that took "advantage" of Halsey. The song stood alone without an album or EP to live on, capitalizing off the narrative of Halsey's own life rather than abiding to an album cycle. It's worth noting that both "thank u, next" and "Without Me" were Ariana and Halsey's first No. 1 (solo) songs on the
Billboard Hot 100, respectively.
Fans aren't entitled to these breakup tunes, yet with the success of Halsey and Ariana's songs, @they could just entice record labels to break format and give the people what they want. And what we want is a cap to a celebrity storyline — one that might even mimic our own.
In 2015, my Spotify was crammed full of breakup playlists. They helped me wallow in my own issues. Lyrics from Beyoncé's "
Jealous" and Nicki Minaj's "
The Crying Game" gave me words as soon as all I may do was sob. Even right after my heart had healed, I returned to these playlists to commemorate the tough time — like glancing at a tattoo you got as a reminder of the dark days. I made my sister a playlist for her breakup. My companions with boy problems get links from me day-to-day. Annoying? Perhaps! Nevertheless I guess it's my way of saying, "Hey, I don't know what to mention to you now, nevertheless Tove Lo does."
Miley's "Slide Away" is just more proof: Bring on the era of the emergency breakup bops, separation songs, dissolution ditties, ghosting galops, and what have you. We're habitually going to need them.
P.S. I still hope Miley and Liam get back together.
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