Guitarist Brian Setzer and his wife, Julie Reiten, felt right at home in their aptly named Rock Island Lofts. Setzer would have friends over and "rock the heck" out of the top-floor unit. He even posed with his signature Gretsch guitar in front of the downtown Minneapolis skyline on his rooftop patio for the cover of his 2009 album, "Songs From Lonely Avenue."
"We leave the curtains open in the living room," he said during a phone interview while on tour with the Brian Setzer Orchestra's Christmas show, which included a gig last month at the Orpheum Theatre. "It's the prettiest nightlight you could have."
But after eight years there, Setzer and Reiten are selling their condo in the North Loop neighborhood, which is within walking distance of restaurants, nightlife haunts and Target Field. They're moving to a western suburb where Reiten will have a yard for gardening and space for an art studio — and Setzer will have a three-car garage. "My hobby is working on hot rods and motorcycles," he said.
'My Minnesota gal'
Setzer, known for his '50s-style blond pompadour and masterful guitar playing, founded the rockabilly revival band the Stray Cats, which produced hits such as "Stray Cat Strut" and "Rock This Town" in the 1980s. Then he revived big-band swing music with the Brian Setzer Orchestra in the 1990s.
He met Reiten, a singer for the Twin Cities band the Dust Bunnies, in Los Angeles when she auditioned as a vocalist for the Brian Setzer Orchestra.
"I married my Minnesota gal, Julie," he said. "We were living in California, and we kept going back and forth to visit her family. I fell in love with the city and liked the whole Minneapolis scene."
In 2005, the couple traded living by the ocean for the Minneapolis loft. Rock Island Lofts was built in 2002, but the brick building resembles an old warehouse, with arch-topped windows offering views of downtown skyscrapers and the river. The couple chose the two-level top-floor unit with 3,000 square feet and a rooftop patio. "Being a rock star, I had to have a penthouse," Setzer joked.
The first owner left the unit as a simple, plain box, except for Minnesota Gophers maroon and gold walls, said Setzer. They enlisted interior designer Greg Walsh to give the loft a retro rock 'n' roll vibe that reflected their interests and integrated some of Setzer's vintage collectibles.