P!NK: The Truth About Love Tour photo

P!NK: The Truth About Love Tour

P!nk brings her The Truth About Love Tour with guest Churchill to EnergySolutions Arena October 17th. You will not want to miss this show!

Date: 2013-10-17
Time: 7:30 PM
Ticket Price: $39.50-$99.50

Special Information: On Sale: March 30 @ 10am.

Special Offers

To the right you can see some special offers that are available for this event. You may qualify for a reduced price, better seating, backstage pass, or other possible benefits.

Enjoy!

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Hot Ticket Package

$300 Package includes:
- One General Admission ticket with early entry
- VIP entrance
- Exclusive merchandise item
- Collectible laminate
- Onsite event management staff

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Gold Hot Ticket Package

$400 Package includes:
- One premium reserved floor seat or reserved lower loge seat
- VIP entrance
- Pre-show hospitality (appetizers and beverages)
- Exclusive merchandise item
- Collectible laminate
- Onsite event management staff

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Silver Hot Ticket Package

$215 Package includes:
- One reserved Price Level 2 seat
- VIP entrance
- Exclusive merchandise item
- Collectible laminate

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About This Person/Group

P!nk has never been afraid to speak her mind, bare her soul, and share her deepest feelings in her songs. As she casually confers, “I have no choice. It’s what I do.” Indeed, it is what P!nk does. And, her 23 million in album sales, two Grammy Awards, five MTV Video Music Awards, and eight top 10 hit singles are proof that the tattooed badass with the heart of a pussycat does what she does well. Very well. But, with her fifth studio album, Funhouse (Oct. 28 via LaFace/Zomba), P!nk gets even more personal, more exposed, and more revealing.

“This is my most vulnerable album to date,” says P!nk, 29, who has no problem fessing up to the fact that the split from her husband, motocross star Carey Hart, earlier this year is the subject of some songs on Funhouse. “On my first record, Can’t Take Me Home (2000), I was pissed off at a guy and that was cathartic for me. M!ssundaztood (2001) was very personal and even more cathartic. I remember talking about the song ‘Family Portrait’ in interviews and just crying. Each record got a little deeper and more cathartic than the last. In two years I will probably have worked through all of my issues.”

But, for now, one issue that P!nk is still working through is heartbreak. “Heartbreak is a Motherfucker is what I originally wanted to name the album,” laughs the singer. “But this album is not all about that. It’s not just a breakup album. There is a lot of that, but there is fun happening too and that’s why I named it Funhouse in the end.”

P!nk admits that it felt as “scary” as it felt “great” to reach new depths of vulnerability on such tracks as “Please Don’t Leave Me,” a painfully honest love song disguised by upbeat, cheerful, and happy instrumentation with sing-along “da da da da”s in the background, and “I Don’t Believe You,” the heart-wrenching ballad featuring P!nk’s raw vocals over simple piano and strings. (Both songs were co-written with Max Martin.)

“It’s like letting down the armor and admitting I’m human. I’m a girl. We all want to be loved and love. That’s all we want,” she explains. “‘Please Don’t Leave Me’ is also kind of funny though. It’s like, ‘Okay, I’m an asshole, but love me anyway.’ I’m trying to be better. We’re all a work in progress. And, ‘I Don’t Believe You’ is one of my favorite songs because it’s just so naked. It’s like taking a deep breathe and saying, ‘Here I am. Take me. Take your best shot.’ ‘Mean’ is a country-Aerosmith-rock song that asks, ‘How did we get so mean?’ Everything starts out so yummy. ‘Where did we lose the plot? How is it that you once were holding the door for me and now I’m slamming it in your face?’”

P!nk also pulls no punches tackling the breakup issue on the first single, the infectious pop-rocker “So What,” which hit No. 1 on The Billboard Hot 100 on September 18, 2008 making it the singer’s first No. 1 solo hit song in her career. (She previously shared the top spot on the Hot 100 with Christina Aguilera, Lil’ Kim, and Mya on 2001’s “Lady Marmalade” from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.)

On “So What,” P!nk gets real once again but this time it’s infused with her trademark humor as evidenced by such funny-honest lyrics as “I guess I just lost my husband/I don’t know where he went/So I’m gonna drink my money/I’m not gonna pay his rent.” Having her ex, Carey Hart, in the Dave Meyers-directed video diffused some of the reaction to the lyrical content. “At first I was kind of irked because everyone was like, ‘Well, wait. I thought the split was amicable and now she’s talking shit about him?! What the fuck?’ It’s hypocritical.’ But once everyone saw the video and saw that Carey was in it, it shut everybody up, which was lovely,” explains P!nk, who collaborated with Martin once again for this track. “Carey hadn’t heard the song before he did the video. That’s how much he trusts and loves me. He pretty much just rolls his eyes, throws his hands up in the air, and hugs me. He gets it. He gets me. It’s nice.”

Although P!nk expanded her emotional and musical horizons on this new collection, the one song she is most proud of is “Crystal Ball,” an acoustic guitar ballad written with Billy Mann, who worked on such past hits as “Stupid Girls,” “Dear Mr. President,” and “I’m Not Dead,” among others. “I am proud of the songwriting, melody, and vocals on that song,” she says. “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. Me and Billy got in a room and lit some candles, had some wine, and threw up a guitar mike and two vocal mikes and just went with it.”

Other revealing tracks include “It’s All Your Fault,” in which she proclaims in the lyrics “I conjure up the thought of being gone, but I’d probably even do that wrong.” While in “Glitter in the Air,” P!nk asks a lot of 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?” P!nk 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.”

But as P!nk said, Funhouse isn’t just a breakup album. “Bad Influence” (written with Billy Mann and Butch Walker) is a straight up rock chick party song that makes no apologies for wilding out with your gal pals once in a while. “I’m with the Hindus on that one,” laughs P!nk. “Pleasure for pleasure’s sake is not a guilty sin.” “Sober” is another song that has nothing to do with heartbreak. It’s a dark ditty with strings about how one wishes they could be fearless and lose their inhibitions without having a vice.

The bluesy “One Foot Wrong” is about an acid trip gone bad. “I used to be into a lot of crazy shit,” says P!nk. “Acid’s the most awful drug ever. Don’t take it. But, that song is also about losing control and how easy it is to lose the plot in life and teeter on the edge.” Meanwhile, “Ave Mary A” takes on the world and social issues, asking for help in letting go from “the chaos around me” and dealing with a “world gone mad.”

As for the title, Funhouse, P!nk explains, “I look at life like 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. But, we go and we buy cotton candy and we force our laughter and we get on rides and we strap ourselves in and we do it. 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.”

The title track itself is a funky rocker with the fists-in-the-air refrain of “This used to be our funhouse/But now it’s full of evil clowns/It’s time to start the countdown/I’m gonna burn it down.” “It’s about when the box you’re in doesn’t fit anymore, burn that fucker down and start a new one,” says P!nk. “This was the first song I did with Tony Kanal of No Doubt and his writing partner Jimmy Harry. I fell in love with working with them. We wrote fun fucking songs together. We did ‘Funhouse’ and ‘Sober.’”

P!nk stepped out of her comfort zone in the recording of Funhouse by working away from her usual stomping grounds of Los Angeles and New York for the first time. She recorded “One Foot Wrong,” a bluesy slow-cooked rocker showcasing the grittier side of the singer’s vocal talents, with British musician/writer/producer Eg White (Francis Anthony “Eg” White, who has worked on No. 1 albums by British singers Duffy and Adele) in his home studio in London. And, she headed to Stockholm, Sweden to work with Max Martin, who previously co-penned such hits as “Who Knew,” “U + Ur Hand,” and “Cuz I Can” from 2006’s I’m Not Dead.

“It was really good to get out of my house and get away from my life. No distractions. No phones,” explains P!nk of her overseas sessions. “It was my first time working with Eg White and I just adore him. He’s eccentric and messy and fucking awesome. We worked in his basement while his wife would be cooking dinner upstairs with their three babies and I just loved it. It was really inspiring and a great change of pace – different people, different energy.”

With its mix of sad, thoughtful love songs and fun, upbeat, feisty rock anthems. P!nk achieved exactly what she wanted to on Funhouse. “It feels good to get people not just emoting and releasing all that energy, but getting angry and motivated too. It’s group therapy.”

Venue Details

ADDRESS
301 West South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

DIRECTIONS
From North:
Take I-15 to 600 North (eastbound) exit to 400 West. South on 400 West to 100 South.

From South:
Take I-15 to 900 South exit. Exit will merge into West Temple, continue north to 500 South (one way westbound). West on 500 South to 300 West. North on 300 West to South Temple.

From SouthWest:
Take I-15 north to Redwood Road exit. North on Redwood Road to North Temple. East on North Temple to 300 West. South on 300 West to South Temple.

From East:
Take I-80 west to State Street. North on State Street to 500 South (one way westbound). West on 500 South to 300 West. North on 300 West to South Temple.

PARKING
Park Place - corner of 300 West and South Temple.
Advance Discount Parking for the Park Place can be purchased online when you purchase your tickets for the event.

Several other parking lots around EnergySolutions Arena. Usually $5-$7.

**Wheelchair dropoff curb available on North side.

PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
EnergySolutions Arena is directly adjacent to a TRAX stop, the light-rail train system in the Salt Lake Metro area.

BOX OFFICE NUMBERS
Box Office Numbers
EnergySolutions Arena Administration
801.325.2000

Utah Jazz Administration
801.325.2500

BOX OFFICE HOURS
Open from 9am-5:30pm, Monday-Friday
Open Saturday and Sunday for scheduled events and on sales.
Located on Northeast side of Arena (Level 2 downstairs).

TYPES OF PAYMENT ACCEPTED
Cash, Check, Visa, MC, AMEX and Discover

WILL CALL
Avoid Will Call lines...Choose FlashSeats to have your tickets delivered digitally when you order them!
Located at Main Ticket Office
Will Call generally opens 2 hours prior to event time.
Doors open for most events 1 1/2 hours prior.

GENERAL RULES
No smoking inside the building.
No outside food or drink.

CHILDREN RULES
Varies by event.
Please refer to event page for details.