InstagramMusicNewsMusic / NewsDrop everything and listen to this Miley Cyrus and Stevie Nicks collabThe mashup nobody asked for, but we all neededShareLink copied ✔️November 6, 2020November 6, 2020TextDazed Digital Miley Cyrus has joined forces with Stevie Nicks on a re-worked version of the Fleetwood Mac singer’s 1981 classic, “Edge of Seventeen”. Cyrus heavily sampled Nicks on her recent track “Midnight Sky”, the lead single from her upcoming seventh studio album, Plastic Hearts, and now the pair have come together on a version which sees Cyrus deliver the verse before being joined by Nicks in the chorus. Discussing the collaboration earlier this year, Cyrus said: “I sent her the song and I said, ‘I have an alternate melody, if you don’t want me to pay tribute to you and your greatness and how much you’ve inspired me‘.” “And she said, ‘You can borrow from me anytime‘.” Announcing her new album on Instagram, the country-pop singer wrote: “I began this album over two years ago. Thought I had it all figured out. Not just the record with its songs and sounds but my whole fucking life.” She added: “If it were a chapter in my book, I guess I would call it, ‘The Beginning’, which usually when something is over we call it, ‘The End’. But it was far from that. In triumph and gratitude I present to you my seventh studio record, Plastic Hearts.” Listen to the track in full below. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE7 of Chase Infiniti’s favourite K-pop tracksMeet The Deep, K-pop’s antihero ‘This is our Nirvana!’: Are Geese Gen Z’s first great rock band?10 of Yung Lean’s best collabs‘We’re like brother and sister’: Yung Lean and Charli xcx in conversationIs art finally getting challenging again?The only tracks you need to hear from November 2025Inside the world of Amore, Spain’s latest rising starLella Fadda is blazing a trail in the Egyptian music sceneThe rise of Sweden’s post-pop undergroundNeda is the singer-songwriter blending Farsi classics with Lily Allen 6 Flog Gnaw artists on what’s inspiring them right now