
Noah Cyrus is a 25 year old singer/songwriter from Nashville, Tennessee notable for being the younger sister of Miley Cyrus & the daughter of Billy Ray Cyrus as well as voicing the titular character in the English dub of the スタジオジブリ fantasy classic 崖の上のポニョ. She later signed to Columbia Records after becoming of age, her first couple EPs Good Cry & The End of Everything left listeners divided until her full-length debut The Hardest Part found herself beginning to come into her own. We just got her sister’s most acclaimed project of her career Something Beautiful over a month ago & she’s looking to catch up with her sophomore effort.
“I Saw the Mountains” made for a tight singer/songwriter, Americana & indie folk intro singing about holding onto hope whereas “Don’t Put It All on Me” featuring Fleet Foxes was an unexpected folk pop, singer/songwriter, indie folk, Americana & adult contemporary collaboration that impressed me as a Father John Misty fan since my senior year of high school a decade ago.
Another favorite has to be “What It’s All For?”, delivering vocal performances that feel reminiscent of Miley’s over acoustics reflecting on Noah’s current relationship with her father & the 2 divorces he’s had in 24 months just before “Way of the World” featuring Ella Langley finds the pair coming together for a contemporary country track explaining that them crying on the curb is usually the way it works with them.
“New Country” featuring Blake Shelton served as the final single learning to walk on your own 2 feet & finding your own independence drawing inspiration from Americana once more & the secondary soft rock influences during “Long Ride Home” making our way to the halfway point of were incorporated pretty well singing about her feeling as if the wheels have left the road.
We have Noah over some heavy pianos over the course of “Apple Tree” cautioning not to question or push her to lessen her love since she’s learned from her own experiences that it’s a weapon that ruins everything while “Man in the Field” returns to an Americana sound singing about her father becoming unrecognizable to her & having unfinished emotional business with him implying that he disappears when she calls out for him.
“With You” starts the final act of I Want My Loved Ones to Go With Me wanting someone in her life she’s shared good & bad times with to know that she’ll always be by their side while “Love is a Canyon” comes to a “beautifully true” realization comparing romance to a gorge vulnerably pulling off these low register vocals. “XXX” featuring Bill Callahan closes the album with a duet radiating a nostalgic campfire vibe signing about signing every letter with 3 X’s regardless if it’s to their exes or not.
I wasn’t a fan of Good Cry or The End of Everything, but I did enjoy The Hardest Part for the complete stylistic departure she went for compared to those early EPs & I Want My Loved Ones to Go With Me only reveals what she had inside her all this time. It’s more singer/songwriter & indie folk lenient than the last LP was comfortably finding who she is further pulling from country pop, soft rock, Americana, contemporary country, folk pop & adult contemporary.
Score: 4/5
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