Marilyn Manson at The Armory: dark rock in a venue that demands a loud crowd
Marilyn Manson is coming to The Armory in Minneapolis as part of the current phase connected to the "One Assassination Under God Tour". The concert is announced for Friday, May 8, 2026, with doors opening at 6:30 PM and the program starting at 8:00 PM. The venue lists it as an all-ages concert, and VOWWS is listed as support, an Australian duo moving between darkwave, post-punk, and industrial-tinged pop. It is a combination that makes sense: before the main performance, it leads the audience into a darker, colder sound, without moving away from the evening's aesthetic.
Marilyn Manson is a name that, since the mid-1990s, has shaped the fringe space between industrial rock, alternative metal, gothic theatricality, and pop-cultural provocation. His most recognizable concert moments are often tied to songs such as "The Beautiful People", "The Dope Show", "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)", "mOBSCENE", "Disposable Teens", and "This Is the New Shit". These are songs that are not only a catalog of hits, but also a sketch of his identity: hard riffs, mechanical rhythms, choruses that sound like slogans, and a voice that is easily recognized even when reduced to a whisper.
Ticket sales for this event are ongoing. For an audience that wants to hear Manson's newer material in the same breath as songs from the eras of "Antichrist Superstar", "Mechanical Animals", "Holy Wood", and "The Golden Age of Grotesque", this date in Minneapolis carries additional weight because it comes in the middle of the American leg of the tour, after spring performances in California and Las Vegas and before continuing toward other U.S. cities.
The current album gives the concert a clear story
The context of this performance comes from the album "One Assassination Under God - Chapter 1", Marilyn Manson's twelfth studio album, released on November 22, 2024 through Nuclear Blast Records. The album has 9 songs, and among the highlighted singles are "As Sick As The Secrets Within", "Raise The Red Flag", and "Sacrilegious". For concertgoers, this is important because the newer repertoire does not stand apart from the older songs: the sound relies on dark textures, an industrial pulse, and theatrical vocals that the audience connects with Manson's earlier peaks.
At earlier performances as part of this tour in 2026, songs from the new album appeared, including "Nod If You Understand" and "As Sick as the Secrets Within", alongside proven concert points such as "Disposable Teens", "The Dope Show", "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)", "Tourniquet", "mOBSCENE", and "The Beautiful People". This is not an announcement of the exact setlist for Minneapolis, but a useful signal of what ratio can be expected: a new phase of the career, but without erasing the songs the audience recognizes most loudly.
For listeners returning to Manson after a longer break, the new album functions as an entry into the present moment. "One Assassination Under God - Chapter 1" is not a return to the past only for nostalgia, but a continuation of an aesthetic that combines a cold studio sound, more aggressive guitars, and choruses that gain more body in a venue. In a concert space such as The Armory, such material can sound especially dense: drums and bass carry the rhythm, guitars create a wall, and the vocal remains in the foreground.
What the audience can expect from the performance
Manson's concerts attract an audience that does not come only for individual songs, but for the complete performance: lights, theatrical stage presence, shifts in tempo, and the feeling that tension is not lost between songs. It works best when older industrial and alternative metal hits collide with new material. "The Beautiful People" and "mOBSCENE" carry a direct, almost chant-like impulse, while newer songs give the evening a darker, slower, and more ritualistic layer.
This concert is especially attractive to longtime fans who want to hear a cross-section of several periods, but also to an audience that discovered Manson through the broader alternative and metal canon. Fans of Nine Inch Nails, Rammstein, Rob Zombie, Ministry, or the gothic and industrial scene will recognize a related energy here, although Manson remains distinct in the way he combines a pop chorus, grotesque imagery, and a metallized rhythm.
It is worth securing tickets in time. The Armory is large enough for the concert to have a strong collective charge, but it is not a stadium where the sense of closeness is lost. For this type of performer, that is an important advantage: the floor audience gets a direct, frontal experience, while balcony and elevated positions offer an overview of the lights, projections, and the band's movement.
VOWWS as the introduction to the evening
VOWWS is confirmed as support for this concert. The duo is often described through darker genre labels: darkwave, post-punk, dream pop, and industrial rock. Their role is not only "warming up" before the main performer, but tonally setting the evening. Synthesizers, cold rhythms, and melancholic melodies can open the space well before Manson's harder and more theatrical performance.
For visitors arriving earlier, that is a reason not to plan entering the venue only a few minutes before the main program. Doors open at 6:30 PM, and the announced start is 8:00 PM. Since The Armory also lists a no-reentry rule for this event after exiting, it is practical to handle arrival, coat check, drinks, and a place in the venue in advance.
- Main performer: Marilyn Manson
- Support: VOWWS
- Tour context: "One Assassination Under God Tour"
- Album in focus: "One Assassination Under God - Chapter 1", released on November 22, 2024.
- Doors: 6:30 PM
- Program start: 8:00 PM
- Event age designation: all ages
The Armory: a historic building with the concert pressure of a large space
The Armory is located at 500 South 6th St. in downtown Minneapolis. The building has a long history: from the late 1930s to the 1970s it was used for civic events, concerts, political conventions, and sporting events, and it was also connected with the Minneapolis Lakers in the period before the franchise relocated. Today's concert version of the space retains the feeling of a monumental hall, but functions as a modern event center.
Capacity is listed in venue guides at around 8,400 visitors, which places The Armory in the zone between club intensity and arena breadth. For industrial rock and alternative metal, that is a grateful size: the bass has enough space, choruses can rise out of the mass, and the floor audience remains close enough to the stage that the performance does not feel distant. It is precisely this combination that makes the venue suitable for a performer whose concert relies on the physical impact of sound and visual control of the stage.
The venue also has its own parking ramp, with entry from 5th Ave S or 5th St. According to information from The Armory, parking in the ramp enables entry through internal lines and more direct access to the space. For people who need ADA parking, the entrance on P1 from the 5th Street side is listed, near light rail access; for P2 it is stated that there is no ADA access.
Arriving in downtown Minneapolis
Minneapolis is practical for concert visitors because The Armory lies downtown, a few blocks from U.S. Bank Stadium. Metro Transit highlights U.S. Bank Stadium Station for that zone, a light rail station on the Blue and Green lines. This is useful for audiences coming from other parts of the city, from downtown hotels, or from the direction of the airport and Mall of America, because it avoids searching for parking immediately before the concert.
If you are arriving by car, count on traffic around downtown and other events in the evening hours. If you are arriving by public transport, check return departures before entering the venue, especially if you plan to stay until the end of the program. The Armory is close enough to the stadium and hotel zone that some visitors can move on foot, but a May evening in Minneapolis and the crowd after the concert require a little planning.
- Venue address: 500 South 6th St., Minneapolis, MN 55415
- Public transport: U.S. Bank Stadium Station zone, with access to the Blue and Green lines
- Parking: The Armory ramp, entrance from 5th Ave S or 5th St.
- Accessibility: ADA parking is listed on the P1 level, with entry from the 5th Street side
- Movement rule: for this event it is stated that there is no reentry after exiting
Who this concert is most attractive for
The most loyal audience will get an evening that connects several of Manson's periods. If the key albums for you are "Antichrist Superstar", "Mechanical Animals", and "Holy Wood", you will probably recognize the harder, industrial core of the performance. If you followed him through later phases, the new material from "One Assassination Under God - Chapter 1" gives an additional reason to come because it shows where the project is today.
The broader rock audience can expect a concert that does not rest only on speed or heaviness, but on contrast. Part of the songs hit directly, with choruses sung in the crowd; the other part builds discomfort, rhythm, and visual impression. That is exactly why The Armory is an interesting choice: the space can hold a loud, packed audience, but also leave enough air for slower, darker parts of the set.
Tickets for this event are in demand. This especially applies to visitors targeting better positions in the venue or planning a trip to Minneapolis from outside the city. Since this is a concert with announced support, a clear door-opening time, and a downtown venue, the easiest way is to plan the evening in advance: arrival, parking or light rail, entry, and a place in the space.
Minneapolis as a concert weekend
For those traveling, Minneapolis offers enough content for a short concert trip. Downtown, the area around the Mississippi River, North Loop, and the area around the stadium easily fit into a pre-concert plan. The Armory is in a part of the city where dinner, a hotel, and public transport can be combined without long transfers, which is useful if you do not want to depend on a car after the performance ends.
The city has a strong concert history and an audience used to a wide range of genres, from indie rock and hip-hop to metal and electronic music. In that context, The Armory fits as a space for loud, production-heavy concerts that still retain the feeling of a closed, focused performance. For Marilyn Manson, that means an evening in which the venue itself amplifies the aesthetic: concrete history, a central location, a large mass on the floor, and a stage that must carry both sound and image.
Practical rhythm of the evening
The most reasonable plan is to arrive before the program itself begins, especially if you want to catch VOWWS and avoid the entrance crowd. Doors at 6:30 PM give enough time for security check, finding a position, and getting oriented in the space. Since the concert is announced for 8:00 PM, a later arrival can mean entering an already formed audience, which is not ideal if you are aiming for the floor near the stage.
You should not expect every earlier concert on the tour to be copied in Minneapolis. Setlists can change, and individual cities sometimes get a different order or selection of songs. What can reasonably be concluded from the performances so far is that the tour relies on a blend of the new album and recognizable concert titles. That is a firm enough framework for expectations, without guessing about the exact evening.
For an audience that likes darker rock, industrial metal, and concerts with a strong visual identity, this performance has a clear profile. It is not a neutral rock evening, but a concert built around persona, contrast, loud choruses, and an aesthetic that asks the audience to accept a more fringe tone. At The Armory, with VOWWS as the introduction and the current tour in the background, Minneapolis gets a date that will mean the most to those who want to hear both old and new Manson in the same space.
Sources:
- The Armory - data on the Marilyn Manson event in Minneapolis, the date, door-opening time, program start, age designation, VOWWS support, and venue address.
- The Armory - Parking and Directions - information on the parking ramp, entrances from 5th Ave S and 5th St., internal access, and ADA parking.
- The Armory - About Venue - history of the space, earlier civic, concert, and sports use, and the connection with the Minneapolis Lakers.
- Nuclear Blast - data on the album "One Assassination Under God - Chapter 1", release date, studio album number, track list, and singles.
- VOWWS - confirmation of the performance as support for the May 8, 2026 concert at The Armory and a note about the no-reentry rule.
- Metro Transit - information about U.S. Bank Stadium Station and access to the Blue and Green lines in the zone near The Armory.
- setlist.fm - overview of earlier performances on the "One Assassination Under God Tour" in 2026 for general repertoire context, without claiming that it is the setlist for Minneapolis.
- TheSportsDB - data on the approximate capacity of The Armory and the basic context of the space as a concert venue in downtown Minneapolis.