Miley Cyrus Delivers Dual Emotional Blow with “End of the World” and “Something Beautiful”
- Strunkiss Music
- Apr 6
- 2 min read
Two tracks that hold hands at the edge of chaos, finding beauty in heartbreak and hope in endings.

©️ Columbia Records
With “End of the World” and “Something Beautiful,” Miley Cyrus once again proves her mastery in channeling personal emotion into universal catharsis. These two tracks, likely to stand as emotional cornerstones in her evolving discography, explore the quiet devastation of endings and the fragile hope of beginning again. The result is a pairing that feels intimate and cinematic—vulnerable, yet commanding.
“End of the World” leans into a soft, almost apocalyptic stillness. The production is restrained—delicate piano chords, a faint echo of strings, and Miley’s unmistakably raw voice front and center. She sings of love at the brink, the kind that doesn’t fade with chaos but instead burns brighter in its wake. It’s a heartbreak anthem painted in grayscale, where fear and affection co-exist, suspended in a haze of uncertainty. Her delivery is aching and sincere, showing how even in destruction, there’s an undeniable pull to connection.
In contrast, “Something Beautiful” carries a warmer glow, both musically and thematically. It’s a song about surrender—about accepting pain, change, and impermanence while still reaching for meaning. The production swells with cinematic flair, weaving orchestral flourishes with a steady rhythm that feels like a slow dance in the dark. Miley’s voice is full-bodied and rich, touching on the kind of spiritual longing that comes from surviving emotional wreckage and still choosing light.
Together, these songs create a mirror image of each other: one steeped in grief and intimacy, the other in resilience and grace. It’s Miley at her most reflective—less about performance and more about storytelling. Both tracks seem to wrestle with the same question: If everything we know crumbles, what parts of love or self are still worth holding on to?
These songs don’t try to offer clear answers. Instead, they offer comfort in ambiguity, beauty in endings, and strength in softness. Miley Cyrus reminds us that even when the world feels like it’s falling apart, there’s still poetry to be found in the wreckage.
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