If for aviation lovers, seeing several historic aircraft, such as an Airbus A380 in prototype version, up close is synonymous with excitement, a cultural company from has managed to unite two ions in one place, involving aviation and music.
Every two years, the Circle Music has been holding a major electronic music festival at the French National Air and Space Museum: the Cercle Festival. Cercle stands out for creating incredible electronic music and other genres festivals with performances in historic areas, parks, mountainous areas, uninhabited places and airports.
The Cercle Festival takes place in one of the world's leading open-air aerospace museums, an experience that has been gaining more fans over the years, not only due to the high demand, but also due to the great success of the event. The music festival, which usually takes place in May for two days, has had two editions (2022 and 2024).
Some performances are breathtaking, where the artists perform practically underneath the structures of the aircraft or have the collection as a backdrop, such as the Ariane I and Ariane V rockets built by the European Space Agency or even a Boeing 747-128 with registration F-BPVJ from Air .
In this sense, some DJs take advantage of the special moment of the event to create songs named after aircraft, the list includes the Airbus A380, Concorde and the legendary Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird.
See some presentations and photos from the event:
Discover the French National Air and Space Museum

The French National Air and Space Museum (Air and Space Museum) is the most important in , and is also the oldest aerospace museum and one of the largest in the world. There you can find a wide variety of aircraft, including a prototype of the Airbus A380, the largest commercial aircraft in the world, a Boeing 747 in the colors of Air , two Concorde supersonic jets, satellites and rockets, and other important examples, including Alberto Santos Dumont's Demoiselle.
In addition to musical events, the museum also hosts outdoor film screenings projected onto aircraft fuselages. The museum is expected to expand in 2026.
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