The Best Runway Soundtracks of Paris and Milan SS27
From Fred again.. to Pharrell, the playlists behind Paris and Milan’s biggest menswear shows deserve a standing ovation of their own
By Dayne Aduna
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- Music took center stage at Paris and Milan SS27, with designers using carefully curated soundtracks to shape the mood and storytelling of their menswear collections.
- From Fred again.. at Dior to Pharrell’s live Louis Vuitton finale, standout musical moments elevated the season’s biggest runway shows beyond fashion alone.
- Whether electronic, orchestral, nostalgic, or soulful, the best soundtracks proved that what audiences heard was just as memorable as what they saw.
Music makes the moment
The Spring/Summer 2027 menswear season proved that the best runway moments aren’t always stitched into the clothes. Sometimes, they’re coming through the speakers.
From Jonathan Anderson tapping Fred again.. to score his highly anticipated Dior show to Pharrell Williams turning Louis Vuitton’s finale into a live performance, music once again became one of fashion’s most powerful storytelling tools.
Across Paris and Milan, soundtracks sharpened the collections’ mood, amplified their message, and, in some cases, stole the scene. Here are the runway soundtracks that defined the season.
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Dior Homme
Fred again.. delivers the season’s emotional high
Jonathan Anderson’s Dior Homme show arrived with one of the season’s most anticipated soundtracks. Curated by Fred again.., the show closed with an exclusive reimagining of Lights Burn Dimmer, mixing Jamie T’s introspective songwriting, Christine and the Queens’ vocals, and Fred’s electronic production.
Prada
Minimalism with a cinematic score
For Clarity, Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons stripped menswear back to its essentials, presenting denim, leather, and familiar wardrobe staples through sharply controlled silhouettes that rejected unnecessary excess.
The soundtrack followed suit with a slow-building cinematic arc. Ambient cosmic sounds flowed into Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons before concluding with James Last and Gheorghe Zamfir’s Einsamer Hirte.
Dries Van Noten
Soundtracking a waking dream
Julian Klausner’s latest collection for Dries Van Noten leaned into softness, sensuality, and the imagining of a figure drifting through nature, somewhere between reality and dream.
That atmosphere carried seamlessly into the closing track, Wallace Collection’s Daydream. Warm and nostalgic without becoming sentimental, it reinforced the collection’s lightness, allowing the final looks to feel as though they were floating rather than walking.
Ralph Lauren
An American story, set to music
Presented in Milan, Ralph Lauren’s Spring/Summer 2027 collection unfolded like a road movie, balancing the sophistication of Purple Label with the youthful spirit of Polo Ralph Lauren.
John Andrew Barrow and Pete Masitti’s Hollywood Life proved an apt choice. The track tapped into the optimism and cinematic ambition that have long defined Ralph Lauren’s universe, which summarized the collection’s celebration of American style through the lens of Hollywood.
Saint Laurent
Cool and electronic
Anthony Vaccarello continued his exploration of minimalism this season, pairing sweeping tailoring with sheer fabrics that balanced structure against sensuality.
The soundtrack, built around the electronic compositions of E.VAX, mirrored that tension. Ethereal synths and steady rhythms created a slightly retro-futuristic atmosphere that never overwhelmed the collection, instead reinforcing its confidence.
Louis Vuitton
A runway finale worthy of an arena
Few shows matched the scale of Louis Vuitton. Pharrell Williams transformed the Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris into an ocean-inspired runway before closing the show with a live performance featuring Angélique Kidjo, Pharrell, and Quavo.
CELINE
New beginnings, powered by rhythm
Michael Rider’s first menswear collection for CELINE introduced a confident new direction, mixing sharp tailoring with sporty and bohemian influences while maintaining the house’s effortless Parisian ease.
Driving the runway was Barbatuques’ Baianá, whose layered body percussion and infectious rhythm injected the show with momentum. It was energetic without feeling overstated, giving Rider’s debut an unmistakable sense of optimism.
AMI Paris
Ending on a soulful note
Alexandre Mattiussi continued to champion everyday elegance with a collection built around fluid tailoring and athletic references rooted in Parisian life. The soundtrack reached its emotional peak with Amadou & Mariam’s Sabali.
Rich with warmth and organic rhythm, the legendary Malian track shifted the runway into a more intimate register, reinforcing the humanity that sits at the center of Alexandre’s work.
Frequently Asked Questions
Some of the standout soundtracks came from Dior, Prada, Dries Van Noten, Ralph Lauren, Saint Laurent, Louis Vuitton, CELINE, and AMI Paris. Each show used music to strengthen the mood and storytelling behind its Spring/Summer 2027 menswear collection.
Jonathan Anderson enlisted British producer Fred again.. to curate the soundtrack for his Dior debut. The show closed with an exclusive reworked version of Lights Burn Dimmer, featuring Jamie T and Christine and the Queens.
Louis Vuitton ended its SS27 runway with a live orchestral version of Bando, performed by Angélique Kidjo alongside Pharrell Williams and Quavo.
A runway soundtrack helps establish the atmosphere of a collection and reinforces the designer’s creative vision. The right music can shape how audiences experience the clothes and make a show more memorable.
Dior, Prada, Dries Van Noten, Ralph Lauren, Saint Laurent, Louis Vuitton, CELINE, and AMI Paris all paired their collections with distinctive soundtracks. Their music choices ranged from electronic and orchestral compositions to Brazilian percussion and Malian classics.

Dayne Aduna
Dayne Aduna is an Associate Editor at VMAN Southeast Asia, specializing in fashion, grooming, film, television, and contemporary pop culture. With a strong editorial focus on menswear, his work explores how style intersects with shifting cultural movements across Southeast Asia and beyond.
His expertise spans fashion journalism, celebrity profiling, grooming and skincare trends, fragrance, runway reporting, and cultural commentary, with a particular eye for emerging creatives and youth-driven style.
Dayne has written extensively on fashion houses, seasonal trends, designer collections, and the evolving image of the modern Southeast Asian man, bringing both editorial depth and cultural relevance to his coverage.
