Can't Be Tamed
“Don’t live a lie; this is your one life.” These are the opening lyrics to “Liberty Walk,” the first track on Miley Cyrus’ *Can’t Be Tamed* album. While everyone hits a point at which one’s individuality is discovered and explored, few do it in as public a forum as the one-time Miss Montana, who has grown up on cable and in the mass media.
Miley Cyrus' Time of Our Lives EP spawned the carefree mega-hit “Party in the U.S.A.,” but on her second album, she does just about everything she can to distance herself from that look and sound to announce that she has grown up.
Amidst a storming array of percolating synths and stomping dance beats, Miley Cyrus' third album under her own name opens with a declarative mantra:
Musical maturity still eludes Miley Cyrus. <strong>Alexis Petridis</strong> reviews her 'new, raunchy' album
Miley Cyrus - Can't Be Tamed review: Miley is her own woman now, and for better or worse, she is no longer a puppet of the Walt Disney corporation.