Party at Paisley Park: Minnesota is gearing up for a four-day celebration of Prince’s life
This month Prince fans can gather at Paisley Park to celebrate the icon's legacy.
Prince fans can party at Paisley Park during a four-day event titled Celebration 2019, honoring the musical icon’s life April 25-28.
Prince fans can party at Paisley Park like it’s 1999 in 2019 during a four-day event titled Celebration 2019, honoring the musical icon’s life April 25-28, 11ALIVE reports.
The purple party-goers can also gear up for a concert event titled PRINCE: In Concert on the Big Screen that will be held in conjunction with the celebration of Prince’s life and legacy. The Paisley Park concert event will occur in Chanhassen, Minnesota and happen at an off-site venue at The Armory in Minneapolis.
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According to the official website, Paisley Park is Prince’s extraordinary private estate and production complex in Chanhassen, Minnesota. Fans will have the unprecedented opportunity to experience first-hand what it was like for Prince to create, produce and perform inside this private sanctuary and remarkable production complex.
Musical guests set to perform at Paisley Park during CELEBRATION 2019 include internationally acclaimed musician, guitarist and original member of The Time, Jesse Johnson; Prince’s iconic group The Revolution, featuring Bobby Z, Brownmark, Lisa Coleman, Wendy Melvoin and Matt Fink; and Funk Soldiers, a fifteen-piece super-group of New Power Generation and Paisley Park musical alumni, according to the official site.
If you’re a die-hard Prince aficionado the VIP ticket price of $1049 won’t set you back, right? A regular Celebration Pass is $549. From the looks of those prices, this isn’t your average concert.
Also April 21, 2016, marks the third anniversary Prince’s death.
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Prince ashes no longer on display
Visitors who continue to make pilgrimages to the one-time home of Prince in suburban Minneapolis will be able to see mementos that highlight the life of the iconic artist, but at least for now, they won’t be able to see his earthly remains.
According to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the complex which doubled as a concert space in addition to Prince’s living space — which was also where he was found dead of an overdose of fentanyl in 2016 — is no longer displaying his ashes.
His brother Omarr Baker says the ashes are still at Paisley Park, “just not on display.” Baker said, explaining the removal from visitor access. “Three years is enough time to mourn. There’s a season for everything.”
However, not all of the late “Purple Rain” singer’s family feels the same.
“I’m very upset with this,” Sharon Nelson, the oldest of Prince’s six surviving siblings, said. “I think one or two heirs approved the move.”
Since, Prince’s death the heirs to his estate have been at odds according to Forbes, due to him not having a will or estate plan, resulting in them receiving nothing so far.
Let’s let the Purple one just rest in peace.
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