Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Pink

Born: September 08, 1979 in Doylestown, PA
ALL ALBUMS PINK
Tho' she was initially viewed as yet added face in the late-'90s crowd of teen pop acts, Pink apace showed signs of decorous one of the rare artists to overstep and overgrow the marque. Born Alecia Moore on Sep 8, 1979, in Doylestown, PA (near Philadelphia), Pink normative her dub as a nestling (it had nada to do with her subsequent refinement of hair dye). She grew up in a melodic phratry and by age 13 was a diarrhetic on the Philadelphia club panorama, prototypal as a dancer, then as a funding vocalist for the homegrown hip-hop grouping Schools of Intellection. At 14, she began penning her own songs; the same year, a homegrown DJ at Club Fever began allowing her on-stage to sing a song every Fri.
Pink was sullied one nox by an administrator for MCA, who asked her to tryout for an RB grouping called Basic Instinct; tho' she got the gig, the communal imploded not long afterwards. She was speedily recruited for a pistillate RB trio called Choice, which communicatory to L.A. Reid and Babyface's LaFace marque on the forcefulness of their demo; notwithstanding, they too disbanded due to differences over dulcet steering. During Choice's abbreviated studio time, manufacturer Daryl Simmons asked Pink to publish a nosepiece segment for the song "Just to Be Loving You"; affected with the results, Pink rediscovered her songwriting muse and an evenly affected L.A. Reid soon gave her a solo deal with LaFace.
Pink filmed her solo unveiling, Can't Take Me Home, with a multifariousness of songwriting partners and dance-pop and RB producers. Discharged in 2000, the album was a replicate-preplicate hit; it spun off cardinal Top Ten singles in "There U Go," "Most Girls," and "You Make Me Sick." She toured that summery as the introductory act for N Sync, but soon establish herself bleary-eyed of beingness pigeonholed as rigorously a teen act despite her sassy, point-blank persona. As she set well-nigh operative on her espouse-uespouse album, Pink took part in the redo of Patti LaBelle's "Lady Marmalade" featured on the Moulin Rouge soundtrack, which also featured fireball divas Christina Aguilera, Mya, and Lil' Kim. The song was a monumental hit, top-flight the charts in both the U.S. and U.K.
Toward the end of the year, Pink discharged her next unvarying, "Get the Party Started"; it became her biggest, most ineluctable hit to date, scandent into the Top Five. Her incidental second-year album, M!ssundaztood, apace went threefold platinum; it boasted a more person-to-person spokesperson and a more eclecticist soundly, plus heavily contributions from ex-4 Non Blondes vocalist Linda Perry, who helped contribute some more rock sinew to Pink's soundly (as did invitee appearances by Steven Tyler and Richie Sambora). M!ssundaztood attracted prescribed scathing notices as well, and its 2nd unwed, "Don't Let Me Get Me," became additional fast-rising Top Ten hit.
Pink next issued Try This in November 2003. The album was a bit more rock-oriented, due in part to the songwriting quislingism of Rancid frontman Tim Armstrong on 8 of the album's tracks. Try This' lead azygos, "Trouble," buggy into the upper regions of Billboard's Top 40, and merited Pink a Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. On the home frontal, Pink wed motocross racer Carey Hart -- whom she had initially met at 2001's X-Games -- on Jan 7, 2006, in Costa Rica. Her next album, I'm Not Dead, appeared that Apr; its archetypical unshared, "Stupid Girls," promptly became a hit, and the album reached the Top Ten.

ALL ALBUMS PINK

No comments: