About Pink

Pink was born Alecia Moore in Doylestown, Pennsylvania September 8, 1979. Her mother, Judith Moore, works as a nurse and her father, James Moore, Jr.,
is a Vietnam veteran. Her father played guitar and sang songs for her, and from an early age she aspired to be a rock star.

She released her first single "There You Go" and first album, Can't Take Me Home in 2000. Her more pop rock-oriented second studio album, Missundaztood, which began a marked shift in the sound of her music, was released in 2001, and was very successful worldwide, and is, currently, her best seller. Pink released her third album, Try This, in November 2003, and her fourth in April 2006, I'm Not Dead. Her fifth album, Funhouse, was released in late October 2008 and was preceded by her first solo number one on the Hot 100, "So What". The album hosts Top 20 hits "Sober" and "Please Don't Leave Me", and is Pink's first album to spawn five worldwide singles.

She has sold more than 10 million albums in the US and over 32 million records worldwide, and scored eight Top 10 US hits,
won two Grammy Awards and became one of the best known female pop rock acts of the decade.


December 16, 2009

Pink: Carey Hart Taught Me the Power of Love



Pink's heart will always be with back-on-again husband Carey Hart, even as she promotes her new Funhouse album in Europe.


But it hasn't been an easy road.


"When I met Carey, I was an abused puppy in the corner, ready to bite anyone who put their hand out," the singer, 30, tells Women's Health for its January/February cover story. "He was the first man I was with who allowed me to take a deep breath and close my eyes and fall backwards."



The sometimes rosy-haired rocker married the motocross racer in a posh wedding in Costa Rica in 2006, only to split two years later, while Pink was working on her new album. But love has since blossomed again, with the pair's reconciliation earlier this year.

Now, Pink says Hart has helped her open her heart fully to love. "Most of the time, he was there. That's more than I can say about others," she tells the magazine. "My heart was like this clenched fist. And even after he broke my heart, still, I had two bigger halves. I have more capacity to love and be loved."

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