P!nk – TRUSTFALL (Tour Deluxe Edition) (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

P!nk - TRUSTFALL (Tour Deluxe Edition) (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz] Download

Artist: P!nk
Album: TRUSTFALL (Tour Deluxe Edition)
Genre: Pop
Release Date: 2023
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 01:18:56
Total Tracks: 22
Total Size: 897 MB

Tracklist:

1-1. P!nk – When I Get There (03:20)
1-2. P!nk – TRUSTFALL (03:57)
1-3. P!nk – Turbulence (03:26)
1-4. P!nk – Long Way to Go (03:09)
1-5. P!nk – Kids in Love (02:47)
1-6. P!nk – Never Gonna Not Dance Again (03:44)
1-7. P!nk – Runaway (02:42)
1-8. P!nk – Last Call (04:03)
1-9. P!nk – Hate Me (03:20)
1-10. P!nk – Lost Cause (03:38)
1-11. P!nk – Feel Something (03:04)
1-12. P!nk – Our Song (02:54)
1-13. P!nk – Just Say I’m Sorry (03:33)
2-1. Marshmello – Dreaming (02:50)
2-2. P!nk – Irrelevant (03:58)
2-3. P!nk – All Out Of Fight (03:32)
2-4. P!nk – Just Like Fire / Heartbreaker (Live) (05:29)
2-5. P!nk – When I Get There (Live) (03:32)
2-6. P!nk – Nothing Compares 2 U (Live) (05:05)
2-7. P!nk – No Ordinary Love (Live) (03:42)
2-8. P!nk – Cover Me In Sunshine (Live) (02:51)
2-9. P!nk – What About Us (Live) (04:20)

Download:

TRUSTFALL – Tour Deluxe Edition, is an expanded version of P!NK’s critically acclaimed TRUSTFALL album. This deluxe package contains all of the original album release tracks, with a second disc of music featuring six stunning live recordings from her 2023 Summer Carnival Stadium Tour; two covers – Sade’s “No Ordinary Love” and Sinead O’Connor’s “Nothing Compares 2 U” with Brandi Carlile; and two new singles, including “Dreaming,” a collaboration with Marshmello and Sting.

The critically acclaimed original version of TRUSTFALL was released in February of 2023, and debuted at # 1 on the Billboard Top Album Sales Chart.Bouncing back after the relative stumbles of her late-2010s efforts, P!nk recaptures her spirit and voice on the cathartic Trustfall. Her ninth studio effort overall, the set is a motivational therapy session that hinges on themes of change, self-acceptance, loss, and love, reminding listeners (and herself) that everything will be OK if there’s faith in the face of fear and the unknown. Buoyed by this spiritually liberated energy, P!nk pushes her vocals to higher highs with shiver-inducing results, backed by some of the most thoughtful messages in her catalog. As with past releases, she blends sentimental moments of introspection with grand pop highs, tugging the heartstrings one minute and inspiring physical release the next. Dancing and singing through tough times, P!nk delivers the album’s gospel message on the pulsing title track, a synth-washed, Robyn-esque pop sparkler where she implores, “Picture a place where it all doesn’t hurt/Where everything’s safe and it doesn’t get worse.” The equally uplifting Max Martin/Shellback entry “Never Gonna Not Dance Again” is one of those euphoric singalong crowd-pleasers that is custom-built for an eternity at school dances and weddings, while the fast-paced, ’80s synth blast “Runaway” pushes the urgency to the fore and the rollicking “Hate Me” jolts the album to life with a punk-rocking gang chorus, sinister riffs, and abrasive percussion. These more immediate earworms are scattered throughout to appease anyone looking for a radio-ready hit, but they cede the bulk of the album to more reflective fare that provides a different kind of spiritual nourishment. On the wistful “When I Get There,” she mourns her late father with tender vulnerability atop contemplative piano and string backing, while the pensive “Lost Cause” boosts the same piano/strings approach with dramatic choral harmonies. The Lumineers, First Aid Kit, and Chris Stapleton make appearances across a trio of folk- and country-tinged tracks, but the spotlight shines brightest whenever P!nk is at the fore. Additional midtempo standouts include the stunning “Last Call,” which laughs the pain away atop bittersweet twang and a swelling chorus, and the stirring piano ballad “Our Song,” which packs a powerful gut-punch with a show-stopping vocal performance destined to bring the house down. In the end, Trustfall leans firmly on these powerful moments of personal growth, sidestepping P!nk’s sometimes headstrong brattiness in favor of a confident defiance that speaks to triumph and maturity in a way that she hasn’t done before. – Neil Z. Yeung

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