Album DescriptionAvailable in:

"Funhouse" es el quinto álbum de estudio de la cantante y compositora estadounidense Pink, lanzado por LaFace Records en todo el mundo el 24 de octubre de 2008. El álbum debutó en el número dos en la lista Billboard 200, vendió 180,000 copias en su primera semana y alcanzó el número uno en las listas en seis países, incluidos Australia, Nueva Zelanda, los Países Bajos y el Reino Unido. Los singles del álbum incluyen el sencillo número uno de EE. UU. "So What", "Sober", "Please Do not Leave Me", "Funhouse", "I Do not Believe You" y "Glitter in the Air". "Funhouse" suposo para Pink tres nominaciones a los premios Grammy y cinco nominaciones al MTV Video Music Award. "Funhouse" fue relanzado a finales de 2009 para incluir un DVD adicional, y fue acompañado por el lanzamiento de "Funhouse Tour: Live in Australia", un álbum en vivo grabado durante la etapa australiana de Pink del Funhouse Tour.
User Album Review
Don't underestimate Pink. She sells millions, on the back of her genuinely felt self-informed lyrics, sung in an un-cleared throaty voice. Her songs take you with her, whether that's praising the DJ, puking in the loos, or turning borderline alky.
Pink's mastered the pop punk sound in a way that the likes of Ashlee Simpson and Kelly Clarkson can only dream of, due, in part, to the people she works with – this album includes collaborations with Billy Mann, the guy she wrote Stupid Girls and I'm Not Dead with. But it's mainly because she pours herself into the songs with humour and grace.
Post-real life marriage split-up, she swings us round 45 minutes of joyous, out-of-control relationship breakdown, with the odd drunken diversion thrown in for good measure.
Aggressively swinging opener, So What, slams Pink's cards down on the table setting the defiant, self-deprecating tone of the album. "I guess I just lost my husband, I don't care where he went". It contains immortal lines, "I'm alright I'm fine and you’re a tool", and the video actually has the aforementioned ex-husband in there, dancing along (which could be construed as a teensy bit too knowing): so all's fair in love and promotion.
Sober, with its heavy guitars and booming snare discusses the blackouts resulting from drinking to avoid becoming those she sneers at. She admits the party's finally over, until Bad Influence, when she gets it started again: complete with circus organ, this is her L.O.V.E.-style getting-on-down-with-the-girls anthem.
The title track is a joyous, wanton destruction of a framework that no longer fits, backed by a heavy disco beat, breaking down into some blues riff with boogie woogie piano, while roadhouse rockin' Mean discusses the train wreck of her marriage, and the energy she gains from hating her partner. Likewise, It's All Your Fault trips along with cross-rhythms and little piano riff, full of regret, emptiness and rage.
The more melancholic ballads Pink insists on recording don't seem to be particularly fun for anyone, but thankfully they are in a minority here: piano based ballad Glitter In The Air is a bit of a damp squib. I'm not sure what the significance of throwing a fistful of glitter in the air is, but this wimpy attitude doesn't really fit in the celebratory dysfunctional Funhouse.
External Album Reviews
None...
User Comments
