
There are moments when electronic music leaves the club and enters the city.
Streets fill with sound. Movement replaces traffic. What is usually private becomes public. Parades and open-air gatherings turn everyday spaces into temporary dancefloors, inviting people to experience music beyond walls and venues.
When electronic music enters public space, it changes its role. It is no longer just entertainment — it becomes expression. Sound becomes visible. Community becomes tangible. People who may never step into a club suddenly share rhythm, movement and presence.
These moments feel different because they remove barriers. There is no door policy, no darkness to hide in. Music meets daylight. DJs meet citizens. The city listens.
Street events and parades remind us that electronic music has roots in openness and collective experience. They show how sound can connect strangers, reshape familiar places and momentarily transform the rhythm of daily life.
When the city becomes the dancefloor, music becomes a shared language.
