Cercle is a music company headquartered in Paris, France.[1] It operates as a livestreaming platform for music,[2][3] an event and festival producer and a record label.[4]
Founded in 2016 by Derek Barbolla,[5] Cercle originally specialized in organizing, filming and broadcasting electronic music concerts in unconventional venues of cultural, natural, aesthetic or artistic significance.[2][6][7] While the music programming originally focused on various subgenres of electronic music (deep house, house, techno, dance music, electronica),[8] it broadened its spectrum as of 2021 by featuring neoclassical and jazz artists such as Sofiane Pamart (2021)[9] and Hania Rani (2022).[10]
History
Derek Barbolla founded Cercle in 2016.[1] His first livestreamed videos—which streamed every Monday—featured an interview with a DJ followed by a live set.[5] After receiving complaints from his neighbours, the live shows were exported to various underground locations in Paris: the "basement of a sandwich shop", a "club" or on a "moving barge on the Seine".[7][11] Barbolla met Philippe Tuchmann at this time at the Faust club in Paris. Tuchmann later became the artistic director of the Cercle.[6]
Pol Souchier, film director and head of communication, said in an interview with Billboard that the idea of producing concerts in cultural heritage locations “wasn't there at the beginning.".[11] It germinated from their first live show at the Eiffel tower in October 2016 with French DJ Møme on the occasion of his Panorama album release.[5][12] Barbolla had sent a request for a live music performance via the Eiffel Tower’s website’s contact page and received a positive response.[11] Since then, Cercle has invited an artist on Mondays for a live performance or one-hour DJ set[13] in cultural heritage sites across the world.[3][6][14] The guest was then interviewed by Cercle, with questions from online viewers.[15]
Key events
Cercle has produced and broadcast more than 240 programmes in 31 different countries, among the most notable:
Cercle Records is a record label founded in September 2020 and owned by the parent company Cercle.[4][42] Since its inception, Cercle Records has released around 40 singles and EPs from artists invited on the Cercle channel, such as Nopalitos by Kid Francescoli (2021), Cappadocia by Ben Böhmer and Romain Garcia (2021),[4]Canopée des Cîmes by Jan Blomqvist (2022), Abu Simbel by WhoMadeWho (2021)[43] or BOREALIS by Sofiane Pamart (2021).[9]
Cercle Festival
Cercle has produced two festivals (branded as "Cercle Festival") in 2019[44] and 2022.[45]
Cercle Festival 2019
The 2019 Cercle Festival took place on 11 May 2019 at the Château de Chambord on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of the castle.[44]
Cercle Festival 2022
Originally scheduled for 10–11 October 2020, this edition of the Cercle Festival was postponed twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[45] and finally took place on 14–15 May 2022 at the National Air & Space Museum near Le Bourget, France, with a total capacity of 24,000 people over the course of the event.[45] The festival featured a line-up of 28 international artists. This edition of the festival was named "Best Electro Music Festival in France 2022" at the Heavent Awards.[46]
Other formats
Cercle Stories
In January 2021, Cercle introduced Cercle Stories, a new audiovisual format that aims to showcase an artist’s performance of a track in a location of cultural, historical, natural or aesthetic interest.[47][48][49] Cercle Story: Chapter One released in November 2021. Cercle Story: Chapter Two was avant-premiered at Le Grand Rex in Paris, followed by a release party with the featured artists at the Rex Club[50]
Cercle Moment
Since 2022, Cercle has also developed a new travel experience format, Cercle Moment. For example, Cercle announced in December 2022 a "five-day journey along the Nile" experience in February 2023, which will culminate at Adriatique's live concert at the Temple of Hatshepsut near Luxor, Egypt.[51][31][52]
One Way
In April 2023, Cercle introduced One Way, a series of 20 underground concert experiences that aim to "bring back the essence of dance music" in an age of image and digital hyperconsumerism.[53][54][55] In order to focus the experience solely on music, One Way rejects all superficial distractions such as phones, cameras, online music broadcasting and most importantly the identity of the artist.[56] Artists perform within a cubic, modern and enclosed installation art and can see the audience, whereas they cannot see them.[55] Their identity is kept secret until it is revealed at the end of their set. The first one is scheduled for May 11, 2023 in Paris, France.[55][56][57]