
After months of speculation and subtle teases on social media, Pink — known to fans by her real name, Alecia Moore — has finally confirmed the release date of her much-anticipated 10th studio album. The announcement marks a major milestone in her already legendary career, and perhaps even more significantly, signals a heartfelt reconciliation with longtime producer and collaborator, Max Martin. Fans and industry insiders alike are calling it a full-circle moment that could redefine her sound once again.
The new album, titled “Mirrorball Heart”, is slated for release on November 8, 2025, and will reportedly feature a mix of anthemic pop-rock, soul-searching ballads, and even a few electronic twists. In a recent interview, Pink shared that the record is deeply personal, influenced by the emotional turbulence of the last few years — from pandemic introspection to motherhood, to re-evaluating long-term creative relationships. “This one’s got blood on it,” she said. “It’s raw and loud and tender in places I didn’t know I had.”
Perhaps the most intriguing part of the announcement is Pink’s reunion with Max Martin, the Swedish pop architect behind some of her most enduring hits like “So What,” “Raise Your Glass,” and “Just Like a Pill.” The two had parted ways creatively for several years, pursuing different directions, but as Pink explained, “Time softens everything. I missed what we had. I missed the magic. And when we got back in the studio… it was like the music was waiting for us to come home.”
According to insiders, the reunion sessions were charged with emotion. Max Martin reportedly said in a behind-the-scenes clip that working with Pink again felt “like reuniting with a long-lost family member — only now we both know exactly who we are.” Several tracks from the album were co-written with Martin and his longtime partner-in-production, Shellback, whose presence ensures that the album will strike that classic Pink balance of rebellious fire and melodic vulnerability.
The lead single, “Let Me Burn,” drops on August 16, and early press previews describe it as a towering, arena-ready track with soaring vocals, crashing guitars, and lyrics that sound like a defiant open letter to the past. The chorus alone — reportedly featuring the line, “If I have to break just to feel again, then let me burn” — is already being quoted across fan forums and early review snippets. It’s being called “a new era Pink moment” and “her most emotionally explosive work since Try.”
Pink’s team has also confirmed a short documentary-style film will accompany the album release, offering an unfiltered look into the creation process and her healing journey back to familiar collaborators. Fans will get to see studio footage, candid moments with her family, and personal reflections on why this project mattered so deeply. “It’s not about going back,” Pink explains in a voiceover. “It’s about finally being strong enough to carry it all forward.”
For an artist whose music has always leaned into truth, pain, and resilience, this 10th album feels like more than just a landmark number. It’s a declaration that Pink isn’t done evolving — that even after a decades-long career of reinvention and boundary-pushing, she still has more to say, more to scream, more to sing. And this time, she’s doing it with the people who helped her build the foundation in the first place.
As anticipation builds for Mirrorball Heart, fans can pre-save the album on all major platforms beginning this week. With the reunion of powerhouse talents, a soul-exposing new track, and Pink’s unmistakable voice at its center, this release is poised to be one of the most talked-about pop events of the year — and perhaps one of the most meaningful chapters in Pink’s career to date.