"Hometown!" Prince proclaimed whenever he played the Twin Cities.
Whether it was one of the big sports arenas or the old bus depot that became First Avenue, the Purple One seemed more comfortable onstage here than he did in other cities. He talked more, smiled more, experimented more.
To commemorate the second anniversary of his passing, we dug into the Star Tribune archives and unearthed dozens of unpublished concert photographs showing a relaxed, playful side that fans in other cities seldom got to see. We think of it as Prime-Time Prince — those days in the 1980s when he'd play hometown concerts before taking his band on the road.
"Good evening," said Prince on a night in March 1986 as he greeted a crowd packed into First Avenue in Minneapolis. "We've only been rehearsing about a week. We're going to try to play everything that we know tonight. So some of it might be a little rusty. If some of it ain't right, we'll come back and play next week and get it right."
He then tore through an ambitious 24-song set with, for the first time, a horn section and backup dancers. Prince was as loose and fun as ever. Wearing an oversized white overcoat, he walked through the crowd and even sat in the audience, listening to the band play his dreamy ballad "Paisley Park."
These were the kind of things he later would do routinely at the Chanhassen studio he opened in 1987 and named for that song. But our photographers weren't allowed at Paisley parties.
Now retired, Star Tribune photographer David Brewster shot many of the singer's shows during the pre-Paisley days.
"Prince never said a word to me," he recalls. "But I remember some pictures where he was looking directly at me."