Beautiful Trauma
Beautiful Trauma is the seventh studio album by American singer-songwriter Pink, released on October 13, 2017, through RCA Records.[1] Pink co-wrote all 13 tracks on the album, which features production contributions from Jack Antonoff, Max Martin, Shellback, and others.[2][1] The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, achieving the largest sales week for any album in 2017 with over 402,000 album-equivalent units in its first week.[3] It has been certified platinum by the RIAA in the United States and multi-platinum in several countries, including quadruple platinum in Australia, reflecting global sales exceeding several million units.[4][5] Lead single "What About Us" topped charts in various territories and was interpreted by some as a political statement amid contemporary events.[6] The album spawned the Beautiful Trauma World Tour, which grossed over $200 million and ranked among the highest-earning tours of its era.[7] Critics offered mixed assessments, commending Pink's vocal delivery and production quality while critiquing perceived formulaic elements in songwriting.Development and Production
Background and Conception
Beautiful Trauma, the seventh studio album by American singer Pink, was conceived amid significant personal milestones following the release of her prior album, The Truth About Love, in 2012. Over the subsequent five years, Pink transitioned into a more domestic role, describing herself as a "soccer mom" residing on a farm, where she engaged in routine family activities such as attending preschool events, bake sales, and her children's lemonade stands. This period included the birth of her first child, Willow, in 2011, and her second, Jameson, in December 2016, alongside navigating the dynamics of her marriage to Carey Hart, which she has characterized as a source of both fulfillment and challenge.[8] The album's foundational concept crystallized around the interplay of beauty and trauma inherent in life and relationships, a theme Pink articulated as stemming from her observation that "life is really traumatic... but there's more good than bad." She specifically referenced her father's adage—"I wish you enough" rain to appreciate sunshine and enough hardships to value ease—as emblematic of this duality, which informed the title and overarching narrative of finding joy amid adversity.[9] Early ideas emphasized authenticity over stylistic reinvention, with Pink aiming to capture unfiltered snapshots of her evolving personal struggles rather than contrived melancholy, prioritizing superior recording quality to convey raw emotional depth.[8]Writing Process and Inspirations
Pink began songwriting for Beautiful Trauma after a five-year gap following her 2012 album The Truth About Love, with the process reflecting her life as a mother raising two children on a farm and participating in routine family activities such as preschool drop-offs and bake sales.[8] The lyrics drew from the intricacies of her long-term marriage to Carey Hart, exploring themes of love's simultaneous beauty and pain without veering into unrelentingly somber territory.[8] She co-wrote all 14 tracks, emphasizing authenticity over contrived pop narratives.[10] Key collaborations shaped the writing, including sessions with Jack Antonoff for the title track, where Pink appreciated his quirky, intuitive style that aligned with her goal of conveying raw relational dynamics.[8] Antonoff later stated that the songs stemmed directly from Pink's personal experiences, describing his role as observing her vulnerability in the studio.[10] For "What About Us," the lead single, Pink worked with Johnny McDaid and Steve Mac; McDaid characterized the process as an "alchemy" of iterative refinement, starting from broad questions about human division and unity to craft a politically tinged anthem.[11] Inspirations extended beyond personal relationships to broader existential and societal observations, with Pink citing life's inherent traumas balanced by moments of joy and love, influenced by her father's Vietnam-era philosophy of wishing others "enough" to endure difficulties.[9] Tracks like "What About Us" incorporated her concerns over injustice, racism, and political polarization, positioning the album as a call for empathy amid division.[9] Overall, the writing prioritized emotional honesty over commercial formulas, allowing Pink to address maturity, resilience, and transformation in relationships and self.[9][8]Recording and Production Details
P!nk co-wrote all 13 tracks on Beautiful Trauma, drawing from personal experiences in long-term relationships to inform the songwriting.[1] The album's production involved collaborations with multiple hitmakers, including Max Martin, Shellback, Jack Antonoff, Greg Kurstin, Steve Mac, and Johnny McDaid, who contributed to songwriting and production across various tracks.[1] For instance, the title track "Beautiful Trauma" was produced by Jack Antonoff, emphasizing a blend of pop and introspective elements through layered instrumentation.[12] Recording sessions spanned multiple international locations to accommodate the producers' bases, including Capitol Studios and The Village Studios in Los Angeles, California; MXM Studios and Wolf Cousins Studios in Stockholm, Sweden; Rockstoone Studio in London, England; and Rough Customer Studio in Brooklyn, New York.[13] Additional U.S. sites encompassed Woodshed Recording in Malibu, Earthstar Creation Center in Venice, Aztec Market in Glassell Park, and Turtle Sound in Connecticut, reflecting a nomadic process aligned with P!nk's touring schedule post-The Truth About Love (2012).[13] Engineers such as Sam Holland handled key mixing duties, particularly for tracks involving Max Martin and Shellback's Wolf Cousins Productions, ensuring polished pop production with programmed bass, keyboards, and guitars.[14] The track "Revenge," featuring Eminem, was produced by Shellback and Max Martin, incorporating rap verses over a trap-influenced beat recorded primarily at Swedish studios.[14] Overall, the production prioritized P!nk's raw vocal delivery against electronic and organic elements, with finalization occurring in Los Angeles ahead of the October 13, 2017, release via RCA Records.[13]Musical Style and Lyrics
Overall Composition and Genre Elements
Beautiful Trauma is a pop rock album comprising 13 tracks with a total runtime of 51 minutes and 1 second.[15] It features a polished production style blending mainstream pop structures with rock-infused energy and occasional dance elements, characterized by dynamic vocal shifts from intimate verses to powerful choruses.[16] The sound emphasizes high-end pop-rock arrangements, including piano-driven ballads and upbeat tracks with sugar-rush rhythms, avoiding over-reliance on electronic percussion in favor of guitar and piano anchors.[16] Key producers such as Max Martin and Shellback contribute to three tracks, delivering confectionary pop confections like "Revenge" featuring Eminem, while Jack Antonoff handles others with emotional builds, as in the title track that transitions from ballad-like opening to accelerating tempo.[16] Greg Kurstin and busbee add to the mix of confessional piano ballads and dance-floor tracks like "What About Us," creating a cohesive yet varied sonic palette that prioritizes vocal-driven narratives over experimental excess.[16] This composition reflects a controlled, professional approach, with track lengths averaging around 3-4 minutes to maintain momentum across the record.[15] The genre elements draw from pop rock's core—evident in bold, vitriolic deliveries and rock-tinged intensity—but incorporate subtle dance grooves and folk-like introspection in slower cuts, distinguishing it from purely electronic contemporaries.[16] Executive production by Pink and Roger Davies ensures a unified aesthetic, where rock's raw emotion tempers pop's accessibility, resulting in an album that sustains high energy without chaotic filler.[16]Lyrical Themes and Relationship Dynamics
The lyrics of Beautiful Trauma predominantly examine the paradoxes inherent in long-term romantic commitments, emphasizing cycles of conflict, intense physical attraction, and deliberate perseverance amid personal flaws and external pressures. Pink, drawing from her marriage to Carey Hart—which had endured separations, including a brief split in 2008 before reconciliation—portrayed these elements as a form of "beautiful trauma," where relational strife fosters deeper bonds rather than dissolution.[17][18] In a 2017 interview, she highlighted the necessity of daily recommitment to monogamy, describing marriage as requiring "thick skin" and mutual accountability, not idealized harmony.[19][20] Central to the album's relational dynamics is the interplay of passion and volatility, often resolved through raw intimacy rather than avoidance. The title track, co-written by Pink, depicts a partnership akin to addiction, with lines evoking post-argument reconciliation via sex ("We fight, scream, and shout / But that's how we work it out") and an embrace of imperfections that sustain desire over time.[21] Pink explained this as reflective of how life's traumas—personal and shared—can evolve into sources of vitality, stating via social media that the album's name derived from recognizing "life is f*cking traumatic. But it's also incredibly beautiful."[22] Tracks like "But We Lost It" shift to introspective regret over eroded connection despite efforts ("We had a fire, but we lost it / In the smoke and the mirrors"), underscoring themes of complacency's toll on once-vibrant unions.[23][24] Broader dynamics reveal a rejection of superficial romance in favor of pragmatic endurance, with Pink advocating self-improvement as prerequisite to relational repair. In discussions around the album's release on October 13, 2017, she stressed that sustaining her 11-year marriage involved confronting individual "demons" like unresolved anger, rather than external fixes, aligning with her view that true partnership demands ongoing, unflinching effort.[9][18] Songs such as "Whatever You Want" further illustrate this by exploring openness to compromise within boundaries, framing dysfunction not as fatal but as navigable through candid communication and resilience.[25] This approach contrasts with romanticized narratives, prioritizing causal realism in how repeated trials forge lasting attachment over fleeting highs.[17]Track-by-Track Analysis
"Beautiful Trauma", the album's opening and title track co-written and produced by Jack Antonoff, features a synth-pop arrangement with piano elements and explores the paradoxical appeal of a volatile relationship marked by passion and pain. Pink explained that the song reflects life's dualities, stating it embodies how "life is f*cking traumatic. But it's also incredibly beautiful."[22] Critics described it as a glossy, high-energy opener with biting lyrics and catchy hooks that set a tone of dysfunctional romance.[26] "Revenge", featuring Eminem and produced by Max Martin and Shellback, adopts a pop-rock style with rap verses from Pink detailing fantasies of retribution against infidelity, transitioning to a sung chorus over a breezy melody. Eminem's guest verse adds vitriolic humor targeting a cheating partner.[2] Reviewers highlighted its feisty throwback energy, punchy beat, and radio potential as a standout collaboration.[26][16] "Whatever You Want" is a midtempo pop-rock track produced by Shellback and Max Martin, characterized by belting vocals and lyrics addressing relational perseverance amid clichés like enduring darkness for light. It received praise for its replay value and muscular hooks reminiscent of Pink's earlier work.[2][16] The lead single "What About Us", a low-key dance-pop song with soaring production, questions authority and societal divisions through beseeching lyrics interpreted as a broader anthem for unity. It achieved global chart success, peaking at number one in multiple countries but number 13 on the US Billboard Hot 100.[16][26] "But We Lost It", a piano-driven ballad produced by Greg Kurstin, delves into the erosion of intimacy in a long-term relationship, with relatable verses building to dual choruses lamenting lost magic.[2] "Barbies", co-written by Julia Michaels and featuring midtempo drums, reflects on the challenges of adulthood and letting go of youthful illusions through wistful lyrics about maturity's pains. Some critics viewed it as less authentic for Pink's life stage at age 38.[16] "Where We Go" employs an adult contemporary style with reflective lyrics on relational uncertainty, supported by a strong hook that complements Pink's matured vocal delivery.[2] "For Now" adopts a soulful tone, addressing temporary relational truces amid conflict with confessional lines about verbal missteps.[16] "Secrets" is an uptempo pop track with catchy guitar riffs and "da-da-doo" hooks, touching on hidden relational truths in a style typical of Pink's playful edge.[2] "Better Life" presents a breezy, laid-back vibe with a cute chorus aspiring for improvement, though it registers as a non-event compared to bolder tracks.[2] The closer "I Am Here", a folk-infused anthem with EDM undertones and choral elements, delivers inspirational lyrics on self-acceptance and endurance, underscored by powerful vocals. Critics noted its broad appeal and potential as a live staple.[26][2]Artwork, Title, and Thematic Packaging
Cover Artwork Description
The cover artwork for Beautiful Trauma depicts American singer Pink positioned in front of a weathered, abandoned gas station amid a desolate desert landscape. She wears a sparkling bustier, a diaphanous white gown visible beneath a metallic silver jacket, mirrored sunglasses, and prominent hoop earrings, conveying a blend of opulent attire against stark surroundings.[27] The image was unveiled alongside the album announcement on August 9, 2017.[28]Title Origin and Interpretation
The title "Beautiful Trauma" derives from the album's lead single and opening track, co-written by Pink (Alecia Beth Moore) and Jack Antonoff and released on October 5, 2017.[29] Pink stated on Twitter that she named the album after the song, emphasizing that "life is f---ing traumatic" yet possesses inherent beauty, reflecting the duality she sought to capture.[21] In a contemporaneous interview, Pink described the title as embodying life's escalating traumas—such as her father's cancer battle and chemotherapy, alongside broader societal distress viewed through news coverage—juxtaposed against resilience and positivity.[29] She elaborated in an NPR discussion that "beautiful trauma" aligns with her father's philosophy of "I wish you enough," meaning sufficient hardships like rain to appreciate subsequent joys like sunshine, allowing one to value easy times amid adversity.[9] Interpretations of the title center on its representation of long-term relational dynamics, particularly the "trauma" of sustained intimacy in Pink's marriage to Carey Hart, which involves ongoing effort, loneliness, and mutual growth despite conflicts.[18] The phrase underscores the album's thematic core: finding aesthetic or emotional value in enduring personal and existential pains, without romanticizing suffering but acknowledging its role in fostering appreciation for love, recovery, and human connection.[9]Release, Promotion, and Commercial Rollout
Announcement and Release Strategy
Pink announced her return to music with the lead single "What About Us" via social media on July 24, 2017, teasing its release for August 10.[30] On August 10, 2017, coinciding with the single's digital release, she revealed the album title Beautiful Trauma, its tracklist, and a release date of October 13, 2017, through RCA Records.[31] Pre-orders opened immediately, offering instant access to "What About Us" and later promotional tracks like "Whatever You Want" (released September 8, 2017) and the title track "Beautiful Trauma" (September 28, 2017) to incentivize early purchases.[32] This staggered release of instant gratification tracks aimed to sustain buzz and accumulate pre-release streaming and sales data. The rollout emphasized digital platforms and social media for fan engagement, with lyric videos and artwork shared alongside announcements to build anticipation after Pink's four-year hiatus from solo albums.[33] Beautiful Trauma topped pre-order charts in multiple regions, reflecting strong initial demand.[34] To counter streaming dominance and boost physical sales, the strategy incorporated album-ticket bundling for the accompanying Beautiful Trauma World Tour, where concert tickets included a CD redemption option priced at $6.99, contributing significantly to the album's first-week sales of 384,000 units in the US.[3][35] This promotion, common in the industry, targeted live event attendees to drive bundled redemptions, though not all ticket buyers followed through.[36]Singles and Associated Media
The lead single from Beautiful Trauma, "What About Us", was released digitally on August 10, 2017, by RCA Records. Co-written by Pink, Johnny McDaid, and Steve Mac, with production by Mac, the track features electronic dance influences and lyrics addressing perceived failures of political leadership. A music video directed by Sophie Muller premiered the same day, depicting Pink and dancers in a dystopian, glitch-art aesthetic symbolizing societal disconnection.[37][11] "Beautiful Trauma", the album's title track, followed as the second single, initially released for digital download on September 28, 2017, and serviced to contemporary hit radio on October 16, 2017. Written by Pink and Jack Antonoff, and produced by Antonoff, it explores the addictive cycles of a tumultuous relationship through pop-rock elements with a retro '80s synth vibe. The official music video, directed by Nick Wickham, debuted on November 21, 2017, showcasing acrobatic choreography and aerial stunts performed by Pink and her husband Carey Hart, emphasizing themes of passion amid chaos.[33][21] "Whatever You Want" served as the third single, released to radio in select markets including Australia on January 22, 2018, after an initial promotional digital release on October 5, 2017. Co-written and produced by Pink, Max Martin, and Shellback, the song portrays marital resilience and forgiveness, drawing from Pink's experiences with Hart. A behind-the-scenes video featuring tour rehearsals, family moments with her children, and live snippets premiered on March 2, 2018, highlighting the track's integration into her live performances.[38][39]Promotional Activities and Live Debuts
Prior to the album's release on October 13, 2017, RCA Records issued the title track "Beautiful Trauma" as the first promotional single on September 28, 2017, to generate anticipation.[40] The accompanying music video, directed by Nick Florez and RJ Durell and featuring Channing Tatum as Pink's dance partner, premiered on November 21, 2017, depicting a 1950s suburban couple engaging in choreographed antics that escalate into playful chaos.[41] Promotional efforts included television appearances such as a performance on Saturday Night Live on October 7, 2017, where Pink hosted and showcased tracks from the album, and stops on Good Morning America to boost first-week sales projections.[42] Live debuts of album material occurred at an intimate Apple Music event at The Theatre at Ace Hotel in Los Angeles before the release, where Pink unveiled several songs from Beautiful Trauma in a stripped-down setting, captured for the exclusive film Beautiful Trauma Live.[43] The title track received its high-profile live premiere at the 2017 American Music Awards on November 19, 2017, with Pink suspended from a wire outside the JW Marriott hotel in Los Angeles, performing aerial choreography alongside dancers against the urban skyline.[44] She reprised "Beautiful Trauma" alongside "What About Us" on the UK series The X Factor on December 3, 2017, further extending promotional visibility.[40] These events emphasized Pink's signature acrobatic style while introducing the album's themes to audiences.Beautiful Trauma World Tour
The Beautiful Trauma World Tour was American singer Pink's seventh headlining concert tour, launched to promote her eighth studio album, Beautiful Trauma. It featured a production emphasizing aerial acrobatics, high-energy choreography, and a mix of new material from the album alongside career-spanning hits, performed across arenas and stadiums. The tour incorporated elaborate staging with aerial silks, harness flights, and pyrotechnics, consistent with Pink's reputation for physically demanding live spectacles.[45] , a medley of "Funhouse" and No Doubt's "Just a Girl," "Smells Like Teen Spirit" (Nirvana cover), "Try," "Revenge," "Just Give Me a Reason," "What About Us," "Hurts 2B Human" (later addition), "Ninety Days," "Walk Me Home" (added in 2019), "F**kin' Perfect," "Raise Your Glass," "So What," and "Glitter in the Air" as the encore, with variations by date and region. The performance highlighted Pink's vocal range and athleticism, often involving mid-air singing and flips.[49][50] Commercially, the tour grossed $397.3 million from approximately 3 million tickets sold, marking Pink's highest-earning outing and ranking among the top-grossing tours by a female artist at the time. Early figures showed $100 million earned by June 2018, with projections exceeding $275 million initially. It set venue records, such as at Madison Square Garden, and contributed to Pink surpassing $1 billion in career touring revenue when including subsequent outings.[51][52][53]Critical and Public Reception
Aggregate Reviews and Metacritic Analysis
Beautiful Trauma garnered mixed aggregate scores from professional critics, reflecting a consensus of competent but unremarkable pop production overshadowed by formulaic elements in P!nk's oeuvre. On Metacritic, the album holds a score of 62 out of 100, derived from nine critic reviews, with two rated positive (22%) and seven mixed (78%), indicating broad agreement on its vocal strengths and thematic familiarity but critiques of mid-album stagnation and lack of innovation.[54] This middling Metascore aligns with the limited sample size, as fewer outlets reviewed the release compared to prior P!nk efforts, potentially skewing toward mainstream publications favoring established artists.[55] User reception contrasted sharply, yielding a 7.5 out of 10 on Metacritic from 256 ratings, categorized as generally favorable with 75% positive feedback, highlighting appreciation for emotional depth in tracks like "What About Us" amid personal storytelling.[56] Independent aggregator Album of the Year echoed the critical ambivalence, averaging 61 out of 100 across 14 reviews, where strengths in P!nk's raspy delivery and collaborative production (e.g., with Max Martin) were tempered by observations of derivative balladry and uneven pacing.[57] These aggregates underscore a divide: critics, often prioritizing novelty in pop contexts, viewed the album as a safe continuation rather than evolution, while audiences valued its relatable domestic introspection.[54][57]Positive Assessments and Achievements
Critics commended Beautiful Trauma for Pink's commanding vocal delivery and the album's blend of introspective lyrics with robust pop-rock production, often highlighting its emotional depth in exploring relationship dynamics. Billboard selected it as Album of the Week, praising the "volatile romance" evoked in tracks like "Revenge," which features warm organs and a duet with Eminem that underscores themes of betrayal and retaliation.[25] Variety appreciated the album's playful interludes amid earnest introspection, noting Pink's ability to balance goofiness with sincerity, as in the title track's oxymoronic energy.[16] Specific songs received standout acclaim for their craftsmanship and thematic resonance. The lead single "What About Us" was lauded for its anthemic quality and subtle sociopolitical undertones, with reviewers describing it as a potential career highlight that interrogates division and unity.[58] Ballads such as "But We Lost It" were praised for their raw vulnerability, pairing stripped-down piano with Pink's emotive phrasing to convey loss and resilience, earning descriptions of tugging at heartstrings through temporary fragility.[59][23] The Guardian highlighted the track's bruised heartbreak as a poignant counterpoint to more bombastic elements.[60] Among achievements, the album's cohesive songwriting was recognized for showcasing Pink's multifaceted persona—as a mother, partner, and empowered artist—demonstrating refined maturity without sacrificing accessibility, as noted in analyses of its narrative arc.[61] Its production, helmed by collaborators like Max Martin and Shellback, contributed to polished tracks that stood out individually, bolstering Pink's reputation for durable pop craftsmanship amid a shifting genre landscape.[57]Criticisms and Shortcomings
Critics noted that Beautiful Trauma lacked the raw emotional intensity and rebellious edge characteristic of P!nk's earlier albums like Missundaztood (2001), presenting instead a more polished but formulaic sound that prioritized marital stability over dysfunction.[57] The album's heavy reliance on ballads was a frequent point of contention, with reviewers arguing they diluted the project's energy and failed to evoke the promised "trauma," rendering tracks like "Love Song" and "Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken" as overly sentimental without sufficient depth.[58] Production shortcomings included an overabundance of mid-tempo grooves and repetitive structures, which some attributed to collaborators Max Martin and Shellback's signature style, resulting in a cohesive but predictable listen that avoided risks. AllMusic critiqued the absence of "emotional mess" that had previously amplified P!nk's vocal strengths, observing that the songs did not challenge her range or convey genuine turmoil, leading to a sense of emotional restraint.[62] Excessive profanity was another highlighted flaw, with Variety pointing out its gratuitous use across tracks, which felt forced rather than organic to the themes of relational strife.[16] Aggregate scores reflected these issues, with Metacritic compiling a 61/100 from 9 critics, predominantly mixed verdicts (77%) citing the album's safety and lack of innovation as barriers to standout impact.[55] User reviews echoed professional critiques in part, with 12% negative ratings on Metacritic faulting the project for feeling like a commercial concession to maturity, diminishing P!nk's signature defiance.[56] Compared to her prior release The Truth About Love (2012), which scored higher at 77/100, Beautiful Trauma marked a relative decline, interpreted by some as evidence of creative stagnation amid personal contentment.[57]Accolades, Nominations, and Awards
Beautiful Trauma received a nomination for Best Pop Vocal Album at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards held on February 10, 2019, but lost to Ariana Grande's Sweetener.[63] The lead single "What About Us" from the album was nominated for Best Pop Solo Performance at the preceding 60th Annual Grammy Awards on January 28, 2018.[64] At the 2018 Billboard Music Awards on May 20, 2018, the album was nominated for Top Album, reflecting its strong sales performance, though it did not win.[65]| Award Ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grammy Awards | Best Pop Vocal Album | Beautiful Trauma | Nominated | 2019[63] |
| Grammy Awards | Best Pop Solo Performance | "What About Us" | Nominated | 2018[64] |
| Billboard Music Awards | Top Album | Beautiful Trauma | Nominated | 2018[65] |
Commercial Performance and Metrics
Sales Figures and Certifications
Beautiful Trauma debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 in the United States, earning 408,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, which included 384,000 pure album sales according to Nielsen Music data.[3] This represented the largest opening week for any album by a female artist in 2017 and Pink's strongest debut to date.[3] The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the album platinum on April 19, 2018, for shipments exceeding 1,000,000 units.[67] Internationally, the album achieved strong commercial performance, with estimated pure sales totaling 2.66 million units worldwide based on aggregated chart data and reported figures.[68] Certifications included double platinum in Australia (140,000 units) from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) and platinum awards in the United Kingdom (600,000 units) from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) and in France (100,000 units) from the Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP).[69]| Country | Certification | Certified Units | Certifying Body | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | 2× Platinum | 140,000 | ARIA | [69] |
| France | Platinum | 100,000 | SNEP | (Note: SNEP official via news) |
| United Kingdom | Platinum | 600,000 | BPI | [70] |
| United States | Platinum | 1,000,000 | RIAA | [67] |
Chart Achievements and Longevity
Beautiful Trauma debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 in the United States, earning 408,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, the largest opening week for any album by a female artist in 2017 and Pink's second chart-topping album overall.[3] It also reached number one on the Canadian Albums Chart, later returning to the summit amid sustained streaming and sales activity.[71] In the United Kingdom, the album entered at number one on the Official Albums Chart with 70,074 combined units, marking Pink's first leader there since Funhouse in 2008 and the strongest first-week performance for a female solo album that year.[72] [73] Internationally, Beautiful Trauma achieved number-one debuts in Australia, where it held the ARIA Albums Chart summit for six weeks, contributing to Pink's accumulated 44 weeks at number one across her catalog as of 2023.[74] The album's chart endurance was bolstered by ongoing promotion, including the Beautiful Trauma World Tour, which drove re-entries such as a leap to number two on the Billboard 200 and renewed top positions in Canada.[71] In Australia, its initial sales exceeded 78,000 units, underscoring regional dominance.[75] These metrics reflect sustained consumer interest beyond the debut, with the release of singles like "What About Us" extending its visibility on combined albums charts.Track Listing and Credits
Standard and Deluxe Track Listings
The standard edition of Beautiful Trauma comprises 13 tracks, released on October 13, 2017.[76][15]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Beautiful Trauma" | 4:10 |
| 2. | "Revenge" (featuring Eminem) | 3:46 |
| 3. | "Whatever You Want" | 4:03 |
| 4. | "What About Us" | 4:30 |
| 5. | "But We Lost It" | 3:27 |
| 6. | "Barbies" | 3:44 |
| 7. | "Where We Go" | 4:27 |
| 8. | "For Now" | 3:36 |
| 9. | "Secrets" | 3:43 |
| 10. | "Better Life" | 3:44 |
| 11. | "I Am Here" | 4:26 |
| 12. | "Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken" | 3:21 |
| 13. | "90 Days" | 3:50 |
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 14. | "You Get My Love" | 5:11 |
Production Personnel and Contributors
P!nk, credited as Alecia Moore, served as executive producer and co-wrote all 13 tracks on Beautiful Trauma, collaborating with songwriters including Jack Antonoff, Shellback (Johan Schuster), Max Martin, Greg Kurstin, Steve Mac, and busbee (Michael Busbee).[77][31] The album's production featured a roster of prominent producers, with track-specific credits as follows:
| Track Title | Producers |
|---|---|
| Beautiful Trauma | Jack Antonoff |
| Revenge (feat. Eminem) | Shellback, Max Martin |
| Whatever You Want | Shellback, Max Martin |
| For Now | Steve Mac |
| Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken | Greg Kurstin |
| What About Us | The Struts (vocal production by Ross Golan & The Struts) |
| Barbies | Greg Kurstin |
| Secrets | Mattman & Robin |
| Better Life | Shellback, Max Martin |
| I Am Here | Jack Antonoff |
| Earth and Sky | Billy Mann, Christian Medice |
| Eleanor & Park | busbee |
| Lady Marmalade (Gonna Get Clean) | P!nk, Tobias Jesso Jr. |