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To watch Pink's new live video of "U & Ur Hand" and to hear her hits "Stupid Girl" and "Who Knew," please Click Here
Pink Talks About Her Songwriting & Collaborators For
Her New Album, I’m Not Dead
By Dale Kawashima
Over the span of six years and four albums, Grammy-winning,
multi-platinum artist Pink has recorded and written hits in many genres. Very
few artists have successfully created hits while traversing such wide-ranging
styles as R&B, pop, rock, punk, soul, blues and dance. And now with the
release of her dynamic new album, I’m Not Dead (on La Face Records) Pink
has returned to the pop/rock/soul mix of her best-selling, second CD, Missundazstood.
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| Pink |
I’m Not Dead is already off to a strong start,
receiving excellent reviews and scoring a hit with its flamboyant, first single
“Stupid Girls.” In a new interview, Pink talked about her songwriting and
recording process for I’m Not Dead, and how she wrote 45 songs for the
project, before paring it down to the 13 songs which made the album. In
addition, she spoke how she wrote certain songs, and the writer/producers she
collaborated with.
“I didn’t expect to be so emotionally involved in this
album, because the last album (Try This in 2003) was definitely a
draining experience,” explained Pink. “But I was almost forced to be
emotionally involved by the people I started working with. [As it turned out] I
was at a place where I feeling, ‘Alright, I have something to add to this
world. I feel like there’s a hole and I know how to fill it.’ I was feeling
very creative and emotionally available again. And the album came out great – I
did 45 songs. At the beginning of the record it was like ‘I don’t know if I
have anything to say – I don’t know if I could do this.’ 45 songs later they
said ‘Okay, you can stop there’,” (she laughed).
Pink discussed how she selects her writing collaborators.
“It’s different every time – it depends on where my head’s at,” she said. “It
definitely has to be someone I can connect with. I learned a lot from the
experience of recording my first album (the R&B Can’t Take Me Home).
The first album was [the producers saying] ‘Hi…Sing…Bye!’ That was it! That was
the extent of the connectedness. For the second album (Missundazstood) there was a
[writer/producer] I had stalked, that I was obsessed with (Linda Perry). It was
an amazing, strong, untapped fury that she had waiting for me. It was a great
time for us. And then with Tim Armstrong (for Try This), I had loved
[his band] Rancid and his Transplants album. And then he called me, and
it was like the universe just comes together. Tim said “I might have some songs
for you.’ Then I said ‘okay,’ and we worked together and did eight songs – it
was great.”
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| The CD cover of Pink's new album, I'm Not Dead, on La Face Records. |
For I’m Not Dead, Pink’s main collaborator was Billy
Mann, the New York-based writer/producer who is known for his hits with Jessica
Simpson (“With You”) and for being the executive producer/co-writer of Teddy
Geiger’s debut album. Pink & Mann had written one song on her prior album,
the hit “God Is A DJ.”
“I started with Billy Mann, who’s amazing, and who has
become like my spiritual brother. On the last album Billy and I did ‘God Is A
DJ,’ but we didn’t get to spend any time together,” said Pink. “But I met with
him (for the new album), and he went out and bought me books. And that was the
biggest thing that anyone’s ever done for me, because I’m a voracious devourer
of literature. He bought me books that I loved. So this time he has a family
(with two, young children) and he said ‘move to New York.’ And I have dogs – it
was like ‘I’m not moving to New York and leaving my dogs so you can be with
your family.’ And then I moved to New York with my dogs, and it was amazing! It
was so good to get out of L.A. I rented an apartment in New York, and we just
worked together for a month - we wrote a song almost every day.”
One of the songs Pink wrote with Mann is the hit single,
“Stupid Girls,” which she said was not written about a specific person. “It’s
about the epidemic – it’s about everyone and no one. I live in L.A. and it’s
all around. I wrote it because I think there should be a choice. There’s not a
choice being given right now – it’s ‘their’ way or the highway. And I’m the
highway. It’s a fun song – it’s all in good fun.”
Another song Pink wrote with Mann is the politically-themed,
“Dear Mr. President.” “I was in New York and it was Martin Luther King Day,”
she explained. “I was feeling really political and drained and exhausted. I’d
been watching the news and reading the New York Times everyday, and listening
to both sides of the fence argue. So I wrote this song. I think it’s one of the
most important songs I’ve written, and I got the Indigo Girls to sing it with
me. I’ve loved them forever, and I thought it was brave of them to be a part of
this song with me.”
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| Pink |
In addition to Mann, Pink worked with other top
collaborators for I’m Not Dead. She co-wrote three songs with pop
hitmakers Max Martin & Luke Gottwald (whose credits include Kelly Clarkson,
Backstreet Boys, Britney Spears), and they wrote her next single “Who Knew.”
Pink also wrote two songs with artist/writer/producer Butch Walker (Avril
Lavigne, Sevendust and Bowling For Soup), and one song with Dr. Dre’s creative
partner, Mike Elizondo (Eminem, 50 Cent, Mary J. Blige).
Lastly, Pink discussed her album title I’m Not Dead,
and it’s meaning. “I’m Not Dead was like an awakening,” she said. “It
felt good to feel again. I kind of woke up – I turned 25. I felt I had so much
to learn, whereas before I thought I knew everything. And that’s definitely a
huge part of that title.”
Special Features: Streaming Video and Audio
You can watch the new live video of Pink's "U & Ur Hand" (filmed at Wembley Arena in London) by clicking one of the links directly below:
You can listen to Pink's hit single "Stupid Girls" by clicking one of the links directly below:
You can listen to Pink's new single "U & Ur Hand" by clicking one of the links directly below:
You can listen to Pink's single "Who Knew" by clicking one of the links directly below:
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