Miley Cyrus responds to fans unable to get physical copies of Plastic Hearts album
Miley Cyrus has shared a statement in response to frustrated fans unable to get their hands on physical copies of her new Plastic Hearts album across the US.
Last Friday (27 November) Miley Cyrus released Plastic Hearts, her seventh album. With it being Black Friday, fans were expecting to buy physical copies of the album in the US, but it seems retailers opted for sale items as Cyrus' new album was nowhere to be found (on CD and vinyl at least).
Yesterday (29 November) Cyrus shared a response to her frustrated fans who haven't received their physical copies (from pre-order) and those that couldn't find any copies in the shops. She wrote, "My fans are everything to me and to know y’all are disappointed when going out to stores/calling/checking stock to be let down I am equally/if not more frustrated."
Cyrus continued, "When choosing 11/27 THE SUGGESTED DATE for album release my team and I were never told major retailers don’t stock physical albums on Black Friday and wouldn’t get copies of PH until a few weeks after release. The packaging of the record is intimate, honest, and a visual reflection of the sound of my new record that I am so proud of. It was created BY ME personally at home making art FOR YOU. I want it in your hands!"
Before signing off, Cyrus added, "I’ve outgrown blame. It’s a waste of time and energy. This album was a labor of love and nothing can sabotage my admiration for the record my collaborators and I have created."
A response to my fans https://t.co/p4dZGPk91T pic.twitter.com/hVCxetV7k2
— Miley Ray Cyrus (@MileyCyrus) November 30, 2020
- Nadine Shah, Moonchild Sanelly and Sue Tompkins to feature on Self Esteem's forthcoming album, A Complicated Woman
- Scowl announce new album, Are We All Angels
- Brown Horse announce their second studio album, All The Right Weaknesses
- Sumac and Moor Mother announce collaborative album, The Film
- Pan Amsterdam unveils new single, "Day Out"
- Index For Working Musik detail their second studio album, Which Direction Goes The Beam
- DITZ examine the commodification of queer culture on new single, "Four"
Get the Best Fit take on the week in music direct to your inbox every Friday