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Album Information :
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UPC:078221471824
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Format:CD
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Type:Performer
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Genre:R&B - Contemporary R&B
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Artist:Pink
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Guest Artists:Steven Tyler; Linda Perry; Scratch
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Label:Arista Records (USA)
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Distributed:BMG (distributor)
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Release Date:2001/11/20
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Original Release Year:2001
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Discs:1
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Mono / Stereo:Stereo
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Studio / Live:Studio
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Track Listing :
| 1 |
M!Ssundaztood |
| 2 |
Don't Let Me Get Me |
| 3 |
Just Like a Pill |
| 4 |
Get the Party Started |
| 5 |
Respect - (featuring Scratch) |
| 6 |
18 Wheeler |
| 7 |
Family Portrait |
| 8 |
Misery - (featuring Steven Tyler) |
| 9 |
Dear Diary |
| 10 |
Eventually |
| 11 |
Lonely Girl - (featuring Linda Perry) |
| 12 |
Numb |
| 13 |
Gone to California |
| 14 |
My Vietnam |
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Description
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.
<p>Personnel includes: Pink (vocals); Linda Perry (vocals, guitar, programming); Steven Tyler (vocals); Richie Sambora (guitar); Jimmy Z (harmonica, saxophone); Jim Cox (piano, Hammond B-3 organ); Damon Elliot (piano, bass, programming); David Sigel (organ); Marti Frederiksen (loops); Scratch (beatbox).
<p>Producers include: Linda Perry, Damon Elliot, Dallas Austin, Scott Storch, Marti Friederiksen.
<p>Engineers include: Linda Perry, Carlton Lynn, Wassim Zreik.
<p>M!SSUNDAZTOOD was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Best Pop Vocal Album. "Get The Party Started" was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for
<p>Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.
<p>This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.
<p>Whether you were one of the fans who feared or one of the detractors who hoped that Pink would fail to follow-up her smash debut album, M!SSUNDAZTOOD serves notice that the lady with the pink hair (yes, it still is) is more than just a one-shot flash in the pan. The grooving pop of the title-track is less hip-hop oriented than Pink's previous hits, sounding more like an amiable collision between Smash Mouth and Sugar Ray. "Don't Let Me Get Me" and "Just Like a Pill" tread even closer to pop-rock territory, the latter bearing an anthemic quality that wouldn't sound out of place on an Alanis Morissette album. The appropriately titled "Get the Party Started is a funky party anthem, and the rap-flavored "Respect" is a modern urban update on the classic Aretha theme. Whether she's making her way through pop, rock, rap, or R&B, Pink struts confidently enough through M!SSUNDAZTOOD to assure her admirers that she intends to stick around for quite a while.
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