Funhouse - Pink
  • Band Name: Pink
  • Record Label: LaFace
  • Release Date: Oct 28, 2008
Metascore
69 out of 100

Generally favorable reviews - based on 20 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 11 out of 20
  2. Negative: 0 out of 20
  1. The sadder Pink gets, the better the big, rocky roar that characterizes much of the disc sounds.
  2. 80
    Whether struggling with sobriety or confronting her own meanness, Pink has never been less cool: She's hot-blooded throughout, and it suits both her pipes and a female pop genre that rarely embraces this much tangible pain.
  3. On her confident fifth album, the multiplatinum hitmaker attacks her recent divorce in all styles.
  4. Ms. Alecia Moore turns tragedy into a huge artistic coup once again on the only somewhat inaccurately named Funhouse.
  5. Pink continues to make everything she touches her own. She uses brains and brawn to turn the mainstream into a complicated place.
  6. Give Pink three spins and half a chance and by track five's killer New Order riff, you'll be singing 'Please, Don't Leave Me' back at her.
  7. Perhaps Funhouse is a victim of its own excess: it may be inevitable that an album of 14 songs with more than a dozen credited writers will end up as hit and miss, as messy as this.
  8. Funhouse is a ride, empowered by her post-divorce freedom. In a way, that does make Funhouse unique among divorce albums, as it's the first to concentrate on liberation rather than loss--but if she was going to go in this direction, Pink may have been better off not pretending that she's bothered by the breakup.
  9. If the album doesn't always make that point in its words, it consistently makes that point by being as fun a pop record as Pink's albums tend to be.
  10. 70
    Funhouse is more haunting than amusing, but the solidarity that comes along with her recent divorce serves as the effort's muse and proves to be her best partner in life.
  11. Anything that reduces Pink's in-your-face presence, and that includes a preponderance of slowed-down, tarted-up examinations of divorce, is probably an ill-advised move.
  12. 60
    The bigger the gamble, the stronger she feels. By the end of the record, she's lassoing the moon, getting through her loneliness the way she got past teen pop: by sheer force of will.
  13. Funhouse would be more fun if Pink went easier on the bad-love songs.
  14. Frustratingly, the sound and the fury is followed by a string of damp ballads charting her split from her husband, but Funhouse is a solid album nevertheless.
  15. Angst is very well in small doses, but over an entire album it can start to grate.
  16. The otherwise likeably raunchy and bratty Pink is now officially walking a fine line, leaning dangerously close to the humdrum.
  17. Her new album lays into her ex-husband with devilish choruses and potent hooks.
  18. In the end, Funhouse bites off more than it can chew, but it never chokes on its ambitions: it shows Pink as one who is unsure of her post-marital identity, hopping around from emotion to emotion without ever settling onto a state of stability until the album's well-timed closing moments.
  19. Even though Pink oozes disappointment in herself and others, her music mostly fails to keep up.
  20. Pink can reach unusually stirring heights when in the right register. That register, on Funhouse, is something close to despondence with a lot of tiredness thrown in--just enough to make Pink forego her instinct for winking and simply sound pained instead.
User Score

Universal acclaim- based on 72 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 14
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 14
  3. Negative: 0 out of 14
  1. really, this album is a rip-off, one of her worst one's ever but yet one of the best. so what & funhouse and a couple other tracks are good but i do not like the rest. this album could improve way better. Full Review »
  2. Funhouse is fun, but it doesn't have the best songs. It's P!nk's best album, and P!nk's sassiest yet, but she really isn't all that groundbreaking anyway, is she? Full Review »
  3. 8
    Funhouse is a great pop-rock album. "Sober" is a masterpiece, while other tracks such as "So What" and "Please don't leave me" are also very catchy. Despite being serious and emotional, there are also fun -not generic- songs in this album. Definitely worth a listen. Full Review »