Maybe he means it in a sort of poetic, perhaps Elizabethan sense?! Shakespeare liked the word "mistress" when he was talking about someone's love interest (modern day would be "girlfriend"), for example.
Even in Shakespearean times, mistress had a sexual connotation. A young girl was Miss Smythe, and a married woman was a Mistress Smythe. Thus, when using "mistress" to describe one's woman, she was either your wife or your, uh, paramour. You'd never call your intended your mistress.
Anyway, I don't believe I've heard of Pink.
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