He liked it because it didn't have seats but still felt big and theatrical. He liked it because it was a rock club that didn't just book white rock 'n' roll acts. He liked it because the staff would let him show up anytime he wanted, including surprise gigs on short notice. And he liked it for the same reason so many musicians before and after him did and do: It's just a great live-music room.
Paisley Park will forever be known as the place where Prince resided and died, but First Avenue is truly where Minneapolis' newly deceased rock icon came to life.
The boxy, pristine, white studio and residence in suburban Chanhassen would make a good place for a museum, as family members have hinted could happen. The curvy, rugged, black club in downtown Minneapolis, however, is still a living, breathing, thriving testament to his legacy and might ultimately be the best place to remember Prince on his home turf.
"Playing there was always important," said Prince & the Revolution drummer Bobby Z in a recent interview before the April 21 death of his old boss and friend. "It became his marquee, and it still is today."
That First Avenue and Prince would forever be tied at the hip was reiterated in the days and even just the hours after his passing.
Media outlets worldwide showed images from inside and outside the club as 10,000-plus fans lined up for an impromptu street party on the night of his death, and then for the subsequent three-night, all-night, sold-out dance parties. Headlines included this one from CNN: "Fans remember Prince at iconic club."
Of course, that wasn't the first time TV crews and magazine reporters flooded the venue looking for All Things Prince.
In the months after "Purple Rain" came out in July 1984 — featuring performance scenes filmed at the club over three frigid weeks the previous winter, plus songs recorded live on a hot August night — media outlets were on-site filing Prince stories on a weekly basis. Fans from around the world kept coming even after the media left, making it Minnesota's No. 1 tourist destination for several years in the mid-'80s.