Honeymoons Day 5: The End ✈️
📍 Tartosa 🌊
📍 Evergreen Harbor 🏙️
Melo and Krystle are back home!
Click ep1 to watch their lp💕
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Honeymoon Day 2: Sunset date 🌹
Melo and Krystle went to a restaurant, where they enjoyed the ambience, the views and the food. They shared their favourite memories together while holding hands and sharing kisses. During their walk, they saw fireworks and Krystle took this as an opportunity to take photos for her simstagram 🤭
📍 Tartosa
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Miley Cyrus - Endless Summer Vacation
Miley Cyrus has had one of the most fascinating careers in all of pop music, especially within the last decade. Known as a “pop chameleon,” Cyrus has never made the same sounding album twice, but her newest album, Endless Summer Vacation, seems to be an amalgamation of everything she’s done thus far. I want to preface this with the fact that I’ve never been a Miley Cyrus fan, as I’ve found her various sounds to be not that interesting, especially 2013’s Bangerz, and that weird album she did with The Flaming Lips, but it looks as though she’s growing up and maturing with this one. This album has a sound that reflects a lot of eras in her career, including country-pop, new wave, dance-pop, and more straightforward pop with a dash of blues and hip-hop for good measure. This record runs the gamut of what Cyrus can do, and I don’t mean that in a bad way, because this record surprisingly works more than it doesn’t.
I don’t want to say that this record is one of my favorites of the year, but it’s got a lot to enjoy, and for the first time, I can say that I really enjoy her voice. Her voice is a big reason why I’ve never been a fan, because her rasp just never sounded good to me, but it sounds nice here. She can adapt to the different styles presented, and it works well for the most part. “Flowers” is the biggest song from the album, but it makes sense, because it’s one of the best, if not the best song. The hook is utterly impeccable, and her voice reflects that, but other songs, such as “Thousand Miles,” “River,” and “Jaded” sound great, too, and reflect the different facets of the sound on here, whether they’re new wave, country-pop, or more straightforward pop.
There are a few misfires on this record, such as “Handstand,” which is a super weird spoken-word new wave-ish song that doesn’t quite amount of anything or do anything of note, or the Sia-assisted “Muddy Feet,” which has some bad lyrics and a faux-blues sound that doesn’t do anything interesting, but for the most part, the album works somewhat well. It doesn’t blow my mind, but the album has some nice hooks, her vocals are solid, and the lyrics reflect a lot on a relationship gone awry. Cyrus said that the album is broken down into two parts, the AM and PM, and you can hear it, for sure. The first half of the album is more straightforward, slightly slower, and more reflective, whereas the second half is more energetic, more fun, and takes more chances. That’s where the album falters for me, but only slightly.
Overall, Endless Summer Vacation feels just like its title — a summery album that doesn’t have much of substance, at least anything beneath the surface, but the hooks are there, and the lyrics are relatable on a surface level, too, and Miley’s vocals are the best they’ve sounded. It’s clear she’s done a lot of growing up, and the lyrics reflect some of that, but this album isn’t anything to necessarily write home about, either. I’d say it’s a solid record, and in terms of pop records, it’ll get the job done, but including the couple of misfires this album has, there are better albums out there, even if listening to this one won’t hurt.
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