The Truth About Love

| P!nk

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97%
  • Reviews Counted:33

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The Truth About Love

The Truth About Love is the sixth studio album by American singer Pink. It was released on September 18, 2012, by RCA Records. -Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • Rolling Stone

    It’s supercatchy, but Pink strains to shock, peppering songs with gratuitous curse words.  

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  • Billboard

    Pop fans have been chomping at the bit for an album that will set the tone for what radio might sound like for the next year or two. The Truth About Love" could very well be that album. 

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  • The Guardian

    She funnels her thoughts into some of the most pungent songs in pop. That in itself would make her seventh album pretty wonderful, but she also has the nous to convert raw emotion into pop-punk earworms. 

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  • Entertainment Weekly

    Truth may switch up its stylistic forms, but Pink’s uniquely torqued confessionals permeate every song; it’s honesty you can dance to. 

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  • SPIN

    The Truth About Love, of course, is that it’s a battlefield. Pink works best as a one-woman army. 

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  • The A.V. Club

    Pink has never really had a signature sound. What she has is an attitude, a disarming candor that’s all the more bracing because it’s delivered with a middle finger.  

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  • Slant Magazine

    The truth about The Truth About Love is that it’s competently, often frustratingly more of the same from an artist who still seems capable of much more.  

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  • The Washington Post

    It’s pretty clear that she’s still peerless when it comes to making aggressive, attitudinal love songs. 

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  • Consequence of Sound

    Pink (Alecia Moore) has been going to the same party for 12 years and in no way is that depressing. 

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  • Idolator

    The Truth About Love sounds downright tumultuous. Pink’s wide-ranging Real Talk is both obnoxious and infectious, thanks, mainly to her unwavering willingness to sound zany, if not downright maniacal.  

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  • Pop Crush

    Being a mother hasn't blunted her fiery, almost unstable edge. 

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  • All Music

    A big pop album about real emotions and one of P!nk's wildest rides. 

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  • Boston Globe

    On her sixth album, “The Truth About Love,” the singer-songwriter born Alecia Moore continues her winning ways.  

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  • Chicago Tribune

    Call it a draw – it’s not the left-field pop classic she seems capable of one day creating, but it also contains a handful of tracks that laser in on exactly what she does best. 

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  • Digital Spy

    There's fat that could have been trimmed towards the finish, but the result nonetheless is a fierce and thoroughly entertaining record from a woman who proves that growing up doesn't get any easier. 

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  • Pop Matters

    Brave, honest stuff -- that’s already been covered in millions of other songs. 

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  • Montreal Gazette

    With her sixth album, the spunky, smart and awesomely unpretentious bad-girl of pop proves herself as unstoppable as she is indomitable.  

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  • New York Daily News

    As much as fans, and her accountants, may love P!nk as a cheeky clown, only here does she delve into the deepest truths about love. 

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  • Irish Times

    It’s more of the same, in essence, but its mixture of brashness and spirit, warmth and clarity add to, rather than detract from, the end result. 

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  • Metro

    Pink makes a raucous return with The Truth About Love. 

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  • The San Diego Union-Tribune

    Pink has another winner with 6th album. 

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  • Uproxx

    Motherhood has clearly added an important dimension to Pink's life, but in many ways, she's still the hot mess she's always been. Thank goodness for that.  

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  • Spectrum Pulse

    All of the artifice on the tracks isn't needed because it detracts from Pink as a decent performer, and the bad lyrics and worse production are just more evidence that Pink sold out on this album. 

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  • Mirror

    P!nk has lost none of her magic.  

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  • Vivascene

    This is her sixth studio album, and appears to be the one that will finally grant her the first rank of stardom she well deserves.  

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  • NZ Herald

    She's at her strongest when she's being a little vulnerable or stridently empowered, and that powerhouse voice gets to soar through big melodies and throw out cutting lyrics. 

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  • Music OMH

    Maybe not a wholly successful album then, but at its best, The Truth About Love proves that Pink can still credibly compete with the pop stars she helped to inspire.  

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  • Music is My Oxygen

    The Truth About Love is a well-produced and well-crafted album that easily stands up to the rest of Pink’s discography.  

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  • Atlanta Music Guide

    empowerment anthems and slightly off kilter love songs with an edge.  

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  • Culture Fly

    Pink has crafted an album to truly be proud of. 

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  • The Salt Lake Tribune

    This firecracker can pretty much sing a song from any genre. 

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  • Embrace You Magazine

    The Truth About Love isn’t perfect, but it is impressionable. 

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  • Polari Magazine

    Musically, it’s nothing we haven't heard before.  

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