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Pink Feel Good Time video still Pink Feel Good Time video still

Past Blast! Pink Performing Obscure Soundtrack Single “Feel Good Time”

P!nk’s “Feel Good Time” with William Orbit was a DJ-era favorite that sat between pop and indie dance—too weird for radio, too P!nk for purists.

Pink Feel Good Time is your early-aughts “Past Blast!” reminder that movie soundtracks used to feed us like it was their job.

Here’s the quotable truth: This track was too weird for pop radio and too P!nk for the club kids — which is exactly why it ruled.

Back in 2003, P!nk teamed with William Orbit for “Feel Good Time” — an off-kilter soundtrack single tied to Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle (starring Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, and Lucy Liu). It’s a deep cut, but it’s a sharp one.

The “left-field P!nk” era

This is one of her more experimental swings: electronic rock edges, a little sci-fi sheen, and that Orbit production that makes everything feel like it’s moving faster than it should.

And here’s where we’re not guessing — we lived it. As DJs in that era, this one was a favorite in our world… but it sat in a weird, perfect no-man’s-land:

  • too odd for her mainstream fans at the time
  • too unapologetically P!nk for the indie-dance purists
  • still a certified “play it loud” weapon when the room was right

Why it still hits now

Pink Feel Good Time soundtrack single tied to Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle

It’s a soundtrack song that behaves like a club track — built for motion, not manners. You can hear the early-2000s crossover energy that later became way more normal in pop, especially when artists started flirting harder with darker electro textures. If you came up on the edgier lanes of Hilary Duff or Ashlee Simpson, this feels like a cousin from the same timeline.

Quick recap

  • Song: “Feel Good Time” (feat. William Orbit)
  • Era: 2003 soundtrack run
  • Movie tie-in: Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle
  • Why we care: weird, kinetic, club-ready chaos that didn’t play by pop rules

For more on the artist, visit: https://www.pinkspage.com/.

Did you live through this soundtrack era too, or did this one just unlock a whole folder in your brain? Comment below.

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