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The Funeral Portrait in Minneapolis

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Shows are tightly executed with a methodical heaviness that hits harder in person. The crowd tends toward the dedicated rather than casual, with mosh pits that respect the dynamics of the songs. They deliver without showmanship, letting the music do the work.

Known for Hate, The Final Epoch, Sonnets of the Silent, Deathwish, Buried Alive

The Funeral Portrait brought their gothic post-punk sensibility to Fillmore Minneapolis in May 2025, delivering a tight eight-song set that showcased both their theatrical darkness and pop sensibility. They opened with a cover of "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" before diving into their own material, leaning hard into the moody, synth-driven atmosphere of tracks like "Generation Psycho" and "Hearse for Two." "You're So Ugly When You Cry" hit with particular weight in the venue's intimate setting, while deeper cuts like "Dark Thoughts" and "Suffocate City" proved the band's range extends beyond their more accessible moments. The show felt less like a performance and more like a séance conducted by people who actually knew what they were doing.

Minneapolis has a long history of artists mining darkness and electronic experimentation—from Prince's shadowy experiments to the industrial leanings of Replacements adjacent acts. The Funeral Portrait fit naturally into that lineage, a band that understands how to blend melancholic synths with genuine songwriting rather than just aesthetics. The city's venues have always supported acts that reject straightforward conventionality, making it fertile ground for post-punk revival acts who treat their sound as seriously as their presentation.

Stay in the Northeast Minneapolis arts district—it's where the city's creative energy actually lives, with galleries, vintage shops, and the Mississippi River nearby. Eat at Café Alma in the same neighborhood for restrained, high-quality Italian cooking. Spend an afternoon at the Walker Art Center, which sits on a rise overlooking downtown and has genuine landscape appeal. Grab coffee at Spyhouse, a roaster that takes itself seriously without the performative nonsense. The Stone Arch Bridge is worth a walk if the weather cooperates.

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