While discussing their Lady Marmalade song video, Pink appears to criticize Aguilera, escalating their suspected fight
While discussing the Lady Marmalade song video, Pink seemed to implicitly criticize Christina Aguilera.
The 43-year-old Raise Your Glass performer confirmed claims that the two legendary singers have been at odds for many years in an interview with BuzzFeed UK.
Although the two singers have stated that there is no conflict, it is likely that it started after they worked on the song with Lil Kim and Mya back in 2001.
When asked to list her top 12 music videos, the attractive woman promptly placed Lady Marmalade at the bottom.
Pink admitted that «making it wasn’t really fun.»
I’m all for fun, and there was like, a lot of fuss, and there were some personalities, she continued.
When she said, «Kim and Mya were polite,» the insult continued, but Christina, 42, was noticeably excluded out of that statement.
The singer of Ain’t No Other Man allegedly «swung on me in a club» in 2017, according to Pink.
She continued, though, by saying that the two had now resolved their conflict and were «good» with one another.
Actually, it was hilarious when she swung at me at a bar. What the heck is going on right now? What’s going on?
Christina said that she has a different recall of that evening in response to that assertion.
«I seem to remember a night differently.»
The Try singer admitted, in another Watch What Happens Live interview, that «we were really young and super new at the whole thing.»
«I believe that she is an alpha, and I am as well.» And she is accustomed to having verbal fights whereas I am used to having physical ones.
She claimed that they are «simply very different» as individuals.
Working on Lady Marmalade together resulted in a quarrel, but there were some positive outcomes as well.
The American R&B group Labelle recorded the song, which was first composed by Bob Crewe and Kenny Nolan in 1974.
For Baz Luhrmann’s film Moulin Rouge, Pink, Christina, Lil Kim, and Mya recorded their rendition of it in 2001.
Their rendition of the song lasted five weeks at the top of the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 list, peaking in the eighth week.
The video was named Best Video of the Year and Best Video from a Film at the MTV Video Music Awards.
The 2002 Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals went to Lady Marmalade as well.