After a lot of noise going into its opening, the Fillmore era in Minneapolis began on a relatively quiet note Wednesday.
The kickoff show at the North Loop area concert space — probably the most ambitious and expensive music venue to open in town since Orchestra Hall's makeover — turned out to be a special acoustic performance by acclaimed folk-rocker Brandi Carlile. Fans will have to wait until Carlile's next two shows Thursday and Friday to hear the new sound system tested at full volume.
Carlile was nonetheless greeted like a rock star, and so was the Fillmore for the most part.
"It looks clean and beautiful, and you can see the stage well even in the back," raved Jake Krey of Richfield, whose only complaint was widely shared after fans waited in a long line to get inside during a subzero windchill. "You can tell they aren't from here."
"They" is the Fillmore's Los Angeles-based owners, Live Nation. The company, which also owns Ticketmaster, has opened eight other Fillmores around the country based on San Francisco's legendary 1960s rock haven of the same name.

Live Nation built the 1,850-person Minneapolis Fillmore from the ground up at 525 N. 5th St. in the North Loop. A 160-room Element by Westin hotel adjoins the venue along with a trendy burger joint, Trax — all part of a $45 million development spearheaded by the Twins-owning Pohlad family's United Properties.
The Fillmore loudly signals a new level of competition for locally owned venues such as First Avenue.
Fans joked Wednesday about a rather tongue-twisty naming-rights deal on display at the venue; it's officially now the Fillmore Presented by Affinity Plus Federal Credit Union.