Last Thursday, DJ Paul Oakenfold became the first modern artist to perform at the iconic prehistoric monument, Stonehenge, in Wiltshire, England. With this feat, which took over two years of planning, Oakenfold finally accomplished what many musicians have formerly set out to do, including the Rolling StonesLed Zeppelin, and most recently, Ryan Adams, whose planned Stonehenge performance in 2007 was thwarted due to fears of gate-crashers overrunning the site.

Oakenfold, in addition to being one of the most famous DJs in the world, has always been an artist that seeks out unusual performance sites. In 2003, he performed on the Great Wall of China, making him the first DJ to ever do so. In 2017, Oakenfold performed at the Everest Base Camp, laying out a set for the sherpas and the international crew of mountain climbers stationed at 17,600 feet.

For Paul Oakenfold’s Stonehenge performance last week, the DJ was raising money for English Heritage, an organization that oversees the hundreds of historical sites across England—the organization will receive all the profits from the sale of the set, which will be released digitally and sold at English Heritage gift shops.

To avoid the threat of gate-crashers, the date of the performance was kept tightly under wraps and the guest list was capped at 50 people, plus all equipment carried in by hand by a team of 20 people, given that the show’s venue remains an active archaeological site. Furthermore, to preserve the rocks, the show took the form of a “silent disco,” which minimized the threat of damaging the rocks with too loud of amplification.

While Oakenfold could have performed a set of primarily house and trance, for his Stonehenge set, he opted to play a diverse set of artists ranging from U2 to Lana Del Rey to The Weeknd. He was also joined by friend and frequent collaborator Carl Cox for the set.

As Oakenfold noted to Rolling Stone, “It’s more than a DJ playing electronic music.” He continued, explaining that he wanted to curate “an iconic moment — because of the venue and because it’s never been done.” During the performance, Oakenfold also debuted a brand-new track titled “Stonehenge”, with future proceeds of the song similarly benefitting English Heritage.

You can watch a short CNN Connect The World documentary about Paul Oakenfold’s performance at Stonehenge below.