Purple Rain and the Architecture of Excess
On spectacle, sincerity, and the night Minneapolis discovered that a guitar could be a cathedral.
I spent two weeks last winter in a basement rehearsal space on Nicollet Avenue before I understood what was happening above ground. The city was transforming — not with cranes and zoning meetings, but the way a cathedral transforms when someone lights a thousand candles at once. The purple wasn't decorative. It was atmospheric.
The Architecture of Excess
Every stage was a church, and every church needed an altar. The guitar wasn't an instrument — it was a scepter, a lightning rod, the axis around which an entire mythology spun. I watched from the balcony of the Rialto on a Thursday in July, surrounded by strangers who moved like they'd rehearsed this their whole lives.
“The guitar wasn’t an instrument — it was a scepter, a lightning rod, the axis around which an entire mythology spun.”
What Minneapolis understood first was that spectacle and sincerity are not opposites. You could weep during a guitar solo and still be the toughest person in the room. The ruffled shirt was armor. The motorcycle was a throne.