Peter Kramer
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Miley Cyrus performed on ABC's 'Good Morning America' last Friday. She has a No. 9 Billboard Top 100 hit with '7 Things.' 'I probably won't tour again as a 'Hannah Montana' tour,' she says.
Her new CD 'Breakout' attempts to shed some of her Disney Channel roots. 'I do want to, like, showcase a little more of what I can do,' she says.
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MUSIC
On new CD, Miley Cyrus gives Hannah Montana a break
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
NEW YORK — Hannah Montana might be the most potent phenomenon in Hollywood right now — bigger than Batman, bigger than Brangelina. Yet these days, the girl who truly fascinates is not Hannah, but Miley Cyrus.
The 15-year-old face of the billion-dollar Disney franchise is no longer a star for just the tween set. Though "Hannah" is still very much a part of Miley, it does not solely define the singer/actress.
Nowhere is that clearer than with the release of Miley's latest album, "Breakout," which came out Tuesday. Though Miley has already sold millions of albums, it's always been with the "Hannah Montana" moniker attached (2006's "Hannah Montana" and 2007's "Hannah Montana 2: Meet Miley Cyrus").
But there's no blond wig to be found on the cover of this CD. Instead, there's a more mature sound that's already finding an older audience. The CD's first single, the rocker "7 Things," is now No. 9 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart and marks her biggest success in translating her music beyond the Radio Disney audience.
"To be played on these radio stations is awesome, to be able to rock out to it in your car without planning it, without it being just a kids channel," says Miley, who with her deep voice and self-assured manner seems a decade older than 15.
"(I'm) making it a little more fun and edgy, and I think being able to step out of the 'Hannah Montana' thing — not in a way where I'm forgetting her completely, but as my fans grow up, me growing up, too, and kind of having my own person."
The "Hannah Montana thing" is familiar to millions of kids and adults alike. A movie is due out next year, the third season of the kitschy TV show starts filming in weeks and the DVD of the blockbuster "Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds" tour, which wrapped up earlier this year, is a lock to top the charts when it debuts later this summer.
But navigating her own celebrity path outside the confines of the famous character has proved to be difficult. The first signs of potential concern came in the form of personal pictures that made their way onto the Internet, showing Miley dressed provocatively (though not obscenely).
A more serious firestorm erupted in April when Vanity Fair published a photo of Miley wrapped in a sheet, showing her bare back and shoulders. The photo caused outrage, and Miley and her father, country star Billy Ray Cyrus, said they regretted the result of the photo shoot.
Though allowing that she's made "mistakes," she also feels that the media has been unforgiving in their scrutiny at times — and a bit unwilling to see that she's not a little kid anymore.
"It's kind of hard to let someone that was so young when they started kind of grow up," reasons Miley, who was 13 when she debuted in the role. "You just have to realize that people make mistakes and that makes you almost a little more relatable."
Though she co-wrote a majority of the songs on the "Meet Miley Cyrus" half of the last record, on "Breakout," her songs have a weightier tone, discussing the environment, breakups and relationships.
"She always reached the adult audience, because she always reached moms. It's just in a way that radio finally started to acknowledge," says Sean Ross of Edison Media Research, which tracks the radio industry.
" '7 Things,' ... has a little bit of an Avril Lavigne thing going; it sounds like an adult record."
"I hope I get respected a little bit more as a writer," says Miley. "I want them to respect me and know that I have a lot to say; I have a lot for the world to know and take away from what my life experiences have been."
She's also hoping to show more of those life experiences in her acting. She'd like to do some independent films and play gritty characters: "I do want to, like, showcase a little more of what I can do, and also some different situations ... I would like to do something that was a little more deep."
She's even hoping to add a little bit more of an edge to "Hannah" next season.
"There's some things that I want to reinvent with her look, and not make it all sparkles and butterflies, you know? Some stars, and some black rock 'n' roll stuff," she says. "I did want it to grow up a little bit."
But lest anyone fear that she's growing up a bit too much, she's quick to point out that's she hasn't grown out of "Hannah."
"I probably won't tour again as a 'Hannah Montana' tour ... I'm kind of past that stuff. But I definitely want to keep doing my show. I love doing (it) and I wouldn't want to give it up quite yet."
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