Tuesday 17 June 2008

Pink

Pink   
Artist: Pink

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   Dance: Pop
   House
   Dance
   Rock
   



Discography:


Nobody Knows (single)   
 Nobody Knows (single)

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 1


Live form Wembley Arena   
 Live form Wembley Arena

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 1


Who Knew CDS   
 Who Knew CDS

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 2


Who Knew (Remixes) CDM   
 Who Knew (Remixes) CDM

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 5


Stupid Girls CDM   
 Stupid Girls CDM

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 4


Stupid Girls (remixes)   
 Stupid Girls (remixes)

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 4


Pink  Stupid Girls Remixes   
 Pink Stupid Girls Remixes

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 8


I'm Not Dead   
 I'm Not Dead

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 16


Last To Know   
 Last To Know

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 2


God Is A DJ   
 God Is A DJ

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 4


Try This - Copy control   
 Try This - Copy control

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 15


Try This   
 Try This

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 15


Universal (gold edition)   
 Universal (gold edition)

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 20


M!ssundaztood   
 M!ssundaztood

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 14


Can't Take Me Home   
 Can't Take Me Home

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 13




Although she was initially viewed as all the same some other human face in the late-'90s crowd of stripling pop acts of the Apostles, Pink cursorily showed signs of becoming ane of the rare artists to pass and outgrow the label. Born Alecia Moore on September 8, 1979, in Doylestown, PA (approximate Philadelphia), Pink received her nickname as a baby (it had nil to do with her afterward shade of hair dye). She grew up in a melodic family and by age 13 was a regular on the Philadelphia club scenery, number 1 as a dancer, then as a patronage singer for the local hip-hop mathematical group Schools of Thought. At 14, she began writing her have songs; the same class, a local DJ at Club Fever began allowing her onstage to blab a song every Friday.


Pink was spotty one night by an executive for MCA, wHO asked her to audition for an R&B grouping called Basic Instinct; although she got the gig, the group imploded non long after. She was rapidly recruited for a female R&B trio called Choice, which signed to L.A. Reid and Babyface's LaFace judge on the strength of their demo; however, they besides disbanded due to differences all over musical direction. During Choice's brief studio time, producer Daryl Simmons asked Pink to write a bridge division for the sung "Precisely to Be Loving You"; impressed with the results, Pink rediscovered her songwriting muse and an evenly impressed L.A. Reid before long gave her a solo deal with LaFace.


Pink recorded her solo debut, Can't Take Me Home, with a mixture of songwriting partners and dance-pop and R&B producers. Released in 2000, the record album was a double-platinum stumble; it spun off trey Top Ten singles in "At that place U Go," "To the highest degree Girls," and "You Make Me Sick." She toured that summertime as the opening playact for *N Sync, simply soon constitute herself shopworn of being pigeonholed as purely a adolescent act disdain her saucy, candid theatrical role. As she set about working on her follow-up album, Pink took role in the remake of Patti LaBelle's "Lady Marmalade" featured on the Moulin Rouge soundtrack, which as well featured power plant divas Christina Aguilera, Mya, and Lil' Kim. The vocal was a massive hit, topping the charts in both the U.S. and U.K.


Toward the end of the class, Pink released her next unmarried, "Get the Party Started"; it became her biggest, to the highest degree inescapable hit to date, climb into the Top Five. Her sequent sophomore album, M!ssundaztood, cursorily went double platinum; it boasted a more personal vocalism and a more than eclectic sound, plus heavy contributions from ex-4 Non Blondes vocaliser Linda Perry, wHO helped add some more rock muscular tissue to Pink's profound (as did edgar Albert Guest appearances by Steven Tyler and Richie Sambora). M!ssundaztood attracted prescribed decisive notices as well, and its irregular single, "Don't Let Me Get Me," became some other fast-rising Top Ten hit.


Garden pink future issued Judge This in November 2003. The album was a bite more rock-oriented, imputable in contribution to the songwriting collaboration of Rancid frontman Tim Armstrong on eight of the album's tracks. Try This' hint single, "Trouble," kookie into the pep pill regions of Billboard's Top 40, and earned Pink a Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. On the home front, Pink wed motocross racing car Carey Hart -- whom she had ab initio met at 2001's X-Games -- on January 7, 2006, in Costa Rica. Her side by side album, I'm Not Dead, appeared that April; its number 1 single, "Unintelligent Girls," quick became a gain, and the album reached the Top Ten.