The album received positive reviews from music critics. It debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 chart, selling 180,000 copies in its first week and reached number one on the charts in seven countries including Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Ireland and the United Kingdom. Overall, it peaked inside the top ten in more than twenty countries. It was certified as double-platinum by Recording Industry Association of America and 13 times platinum by Australian Recording Industry Association. Funhouse sold more than 4 million units worldwide.
Seven singles were released from the album. The lead single, "So What" became a huge commercial success, topping the US Billboard Hot 100, additionally to twelve more countries, including the UK, Canada and Australia. "Sober" and "Please Don't Leave Me" also became successful, entering the top ten in many countries, additionally peaking at numbers fifteen and seventeen on the Hot 100 respectively. The seventh single, "Glitter in the Air", was released after her critically acclaimed performance at the 52nd Grammy Awards, which was honored as one of the best in the history of Grammy.
To further promote the album, Pink embarked on the worldwide Funhouse Tour in 2009, which broke the record for the biggest tour in Australian history, and the Funhouse Summer Carnival stadium tour at Europe in 2010. The tours sold a combined total 3 million tickets, and brought the tour to a final gross of $150 million. Funhouse earned Pink three Grammy Award nominations and five MTV Video Music Award nominations. As of 2012, Funhouse has sold 7 million copies worldwide.[2]
Background and development
After months of speculation, Pink announced in February 2008 that she and her husband, Carey Hart, had separated.[3][4] According to her publicist, "Pink and Carey Hart have separated. This decision was made by best friends with a huge amount of love and respect for one another. While the marriage is over, their friendship has never been stronger."The couple sought marriage counseling during their separation[5] in hopes of reconciliation.[6]
Pink wrote and recorded approximately 30 to 35 songs for Funhouse. "It's like getting rid of your children: 'I like that one too, but I'm going to let that one die,'" she said of choosing the album's tracks. "The good thing now is that different countries want extra songs and B-sides, so there's always a home for the other kids."[7]
Pink traveled internationally to write and record the album, working with Eg White in London and with Max Martin in Stockholm. "It was really good to get out of my house and get away from my life. No distractions. No phones", Pink said of her sessions outside the U.S.[8] During the recording sessions with Martin, they recorded a song titled "Whataya Want from Me", which didn't make the final cut of Funhouse, and was passed to Adam Lambert for his debut album. After the Lambert's recording became a single and received a worldwide success, Pink released her original recording of the song in, a.o., the Australian edition of her 2010 compilation album Greatest Hits... So Far!!!.[9]
Originally, Pink wanted to call her album Heartbreak Is a Motherfucker, but her record label declined because of a fear that offensive language would affect sales. She also said that she did not want the album to look like a break-up album: "There is a lot of that [break-up], but there is fun happening too and that's why I named it Funhouse in the end." Pink has also stated that she sees life as a carnival: "Clowns are supposed to be happy, but they are really scary. Carnivals are supposed to be fun, but really they are kind of creepy." [...] "and that's like life to me, and love. Love is supposed to be fun, but it can sometimes be really scary. And the funhouse mirrors that make you look so distorted that you don't recognize yourself and you ask yourself, 'How did I get here? How do I get out of here?' But, you think that you want to do it again. That is the same as love and life. It's a metaphor for being in love and for life."[8]
The song that Moore is most proud of is "Crystal Ball". She said about the track: "I recorded it in one take and we didn't mix it. It just went straight to master. It was all about a vibe and not about perfection or being polished. I just love that song and I loved recording it."[8]
Music and lyrics
Pink has stated that this album is her most vulnerable and personal album to date. Much of the album's subject matter alludes to the fact that Moore had recently separated from her husband, Carey Hart.[10] The first song, "So What", opens with: "I guess I just lost my husband/I don't know where he went".[11] "Please Don't Leave Me" also addresses the split. The artist sums up its theme thus: "Okay, I'm an asshole, but love me anyway."[8] In "Mean", she sings, "It was good in the beginning/but how did we get so mean?"[8]
She wrote the song with Billy Mann, who also aided her with the songs "Stupid Girls", "Dear Mr. President" and "I'm Not Dead" (all 2006), among others.
In "It's All Your Fault", Pink blames her lover for giving her hopes of a love relationship, then simply giving up on her. She proclaims in the lyrics "I conjure up the thought of being gone, but I'd probably even do that wrong." In "Glitter in the Air", Pink asks many questions such as, "Have you ever looked fear in the face and said I just don't care?", and "Have you ever hated yourself for staring at the phone?" Pink admits, "I still don't have some of the answers to the questions I pose on this record. I'm still figuring it all out."[8]
The track "Sober", which is the album's second single, was written by Pink at a party hosted at her home, where everyone was drunk or drinking except for her, and she wanted them all to leave. She went to the beach and had a line in her head saying "How do I feel so good sober?". Eventually it had nothing to do with alcohol but with identities. "How do I feel so good with just me, without anyone to lean on?", Pink said in an interview.[12]
"Ave Mary A" deals with world issues and problems. "One Foot Wrong" talks about an acidtrip that went wrong, but also has an underlying theme. "That song is also about losing control and how easy it is to lose the plot in life and teeter on the edge."[8][13] In the title track "Funhouse" she tells that it used to be fun. "It's about when the box you're in doesn't fit anymore, burn that fucker down and start a new one."[8]
Promotion
On September 7, 2008, Pink performed "So What" at the 2008 American MTV Video Music Awards.[14] On November 6, 2008, she performed this song again at the MTV Europe Music Awards during a live show.[15] Pink performed second single, "Sober", at the 2008 American Music Awards on November 23, 2008,[16] She held a secret showcase in Barcelona, Spain on November 20.[17]
European, Australian and North American tour dates for the Funhouse Tour were announced to support the album in early 2009. The first leg of the Funhouse Tour would go throughout Europe. Pink later did a 3-month stint in Australia. The third leg of the tour took place in North America, with 11 dates in the United States and 1 date in Canada. The fourth leg consisted of 3 months around Europe, starting in Dublin, Ireland on October 14 and finishing December 20 in Hannover, Germany.
Pink broke her own record in Australia where she sold-out seventeen shows in Melbourne (more than any other city). Melbourne also had the most tickets and had the biggest revenue. Pink also sold out seven consecutive shows in Sydney in a collective week, all within forty minutes. The overwhelming demand for shows in Australia made Pink surpass her record-breaking run of 35 sold-out shows achieved on the 2007 Australian leg of the I'm Not Dead Tour. The Funhouse Tour made 58 shows in Australia, which made Pink the most successful artist to ever tour the country.[23] Other records broken by the tour included the most shows at the Sydney Entertainment Centre and Brisbane Entertainment Centre.
Also, the tour dates announced in the US would become the first time that Pink would tour in her home country since 2006. The first show was held in Seattle in September 2009 and twelve dates later the US leg of the tour ended in New York City.[24]
With the release of the album's Tour Edition, a live album was released featuring live performances of twelve songs, plus "Push You Away", a studio track which was previously unreleased; the song is also included on The Tour Edition. While the DVD includes 23 live performances, including 2 bonus performances. A Blu-ray version of the DVD was also released. The album and DVD were recorded in Sydney, Australia on July 17 and July 18.[25]
On November 10, 2008, "Sober" was released as the second single from the album.[36] The power pop song,[37] lyrically speaking of addiction,[37] it was written by Pink, Nate "Danja" Hills, Kara DioGuardi and Marcella Araica, and produced by Danja, Kanal and Jimmy Harry.[30] It proved to be commercial success, peaking within top ten in more than ten countries, including the UK,[38] Canada,[32] and Australia,[39] while peaking at number fifteen on the Billboard Hot 100.[32] The song's video, directed by Jonas Åkerlund, premiered November 25 on Pink's official YouTube channel. "Sober" received the same nomination as "So What", but on the 52nd Grammy Awards.[40] Third single, "Please Don't Leave Me", was released in January 2009 in Australia[41] and in March 2009 in the United States.[42] It also became successful, reaching top ten in several Europe countries, also peaking at number eight in Canada,[32] twelve in the UK,[43] and seventeen in the US.[32] Its music video was directed by Meyers, and draws influences from the 1990 Stephen King-based film Misery, as well as other similar thrillers, including Cujo, The Shining and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?. It utilizes both the horror/thriller genre, while also being interpretable as a dark comedy, which led her to release the censored version of the video.
"Bad Influence" was released as the fourth single in Australia, promoting the arrival of the Australian leg of the Funhouse Tour. It was released as the CD and digital single in May 2009.[44][45] The song became a huge success in Oceania despite the absence of a music video, reaching the top ten in both Australia and New Zealand.[46][47] It was released in Germany on March 26, 2010,[48] where it reached number 26 on Germany's official Singles Chart[49] and topped national airplay chart.[50] In April 2011 it was released in Netherlands, to promote Pink's compilation album Greatest Hits... So Far!!!.[51] "Funhouse" was released digitally in the US on July 2, 2009, as the fifth single from the album.[52] The music video premiered on June 20, 2009, in the United Kingdom on 4music,[53] featuring Tony Kanal of No Doubt, also the co-writer and the producer of the song, playing a piano. "Funhouse" charted moderately, reaching number 44 on the Hot 100. "I Don't Believe You", the sixth single, was released in the US on October 5, 2009, to Hot AC radio.[54] It failed to enter the Billboard Hot 100.[32]
"Glitter in the Air" was immediately delivered to radio as a new single by Jive Records after she performed it at 52nd Grammy Awards, before the show broadcast was even over.[55] On the February 20, 2010, issue of Billboard, the song debuted on the Hot 100 at number 18,[56] Pink's second highest debut since "So What", as well as her seventh entry from Funhouse, which gives the song credit for raising the sales of the album and pulling it back to the Top 20 on the Billboard 200.[57] On February 1, the live audio recording of the performance was released digitally.[58] "Ave Mary A" was released as a single in Australia in 2010[59] and peaked at #10 on the Australian Airplay Chart. It was featured on the Autumn 2010 edition of compilation CD So Fresh.[60] It was the 24th most played track on Australian radio in 2010,[61] but never charted on the ARIASingles Chart.
Funhouse has a score of 69 out of 100 from Metacritic based on 20 "generally favorable" reviews.[62] Sydney's The Daily Telegraph gave it 4.5 stars, writing, "The record is a balanced blend of upbeat pop gems and midtempo ballads [...] The power of Pink's pop lies in the clever juxtaposition of heartfelt honesty about her life with anthematic choruses and irresistible melodies tailormade to be screamed out by her fans."[73]
Other positive reviews were published by US Magazine, which gave the album four stars, saying, "The rebellious Grammy winner again fuses unrestrained lyrics with perfect pop-rock hooks on her electrifying fifth CD. From her aggressive No. 1 hit 'So What' to the vulnerable 'Please Don't Leave Me' and the openhearted ballad 'I Don't Believe You', Pink confirms she's still in excellent fighting shape."[74] In his Consumer Guide, Robert Christgau picked out the single from the album, "So What", as a "choice cut".[75]
Less favorable reviews came from sources such as Rolling Stone and Blender,[64] each giving the album three stars. Rolling Stone stated, "Pink has shown more personality before, and some cuts, including the goopy ballad "I Don't Believe You", make her sound like just another big-voiced chart-buster. Funhouse would be more fun if Pink went easier on the bad-love songs."[70]
Commercial performance
Funhouse debuted at number two on the United States Billboard 200 chart issued on November 18, 2008, with sales of 180,000, behind AC/DC's Wal-Mart exclusive, Black Ice, which claimed the top spot with its second-week sales of 271,000. In March 2009, it was certified platinum by the RIAA for shipments of over 1,000,000 copies,[76] and as of June 2012, the album has sold 1,960,000 copies in the United States.[77] It was Pink's highest-charting album in that country, until her sixth album The Truth About Love debuted at number one.
In Australia, record shops broke embargo and placed Funhouse on sale one day before its official release date; with only one day of sales, it became the fourth-highest selling album of the week, shifting 7,120 copies.[78]Funhouse debuted officially at number one in Australia,[79] and sold 86,273 units that week (the highest first week sales of 2008). Funhouse spent nine consecutive weeks at number one and has been certified 12× platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association for 840,000 copies sold.[80] The album ended both 2008 and 2009 as the second highest selling album of the year in Australia, and was reported in 2010 to be the second most successful album of the 2000–2009 decade.[81]
In the United Kingdom, the album sold over 37,100 copies in its first day and 83,000 copies in its first five days.[82]Funhouse became her first number-one album in the UK, entering at number one on November 2, 2008, and has been certified 4× Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry for selling over 1,200,000 copies. Funhouse was the ninth biggest selling record of 2008, and the twenty-third biggest seller of 2009.
Funhouse debuted at number one in the Netherlands,[79] New Zealand (certified 3× Platinum[83]), and Switzerland (certified 3× Platinum[84]) In Germany, Funhouse debuted at number two.[85]
There, it is the sixth best-selling album of 2009 and the twenty-third best-selling album of 2010,[86] shipping more than 1,000,000 copies as of June 2010.[87][88] It is certified 4× Platinum.[89]
* Sales figures based on certification alone. ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
^"The ARIA Report: Issue 976"(PDF). Trove. Archived from the original on 2008-11-21. Retrieved 2023-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"The ARIA Report: Issue 990"(PDF). Trove. Archived from the original on 2009-02-23. Retrieved 2023-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"The ARIA Report: Issue 1001"(PDF). Trove. Archived from the original on 2009-05-25. Retrieved 2023-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"Pink – Funhouse". Archived from the original on October 27, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)US Magazine. Retrieved October 26, 2008.