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    Lenny Fontana radioshow Lenny Fontana

Music

How to Send Your Music to a Techno Label

today13/02/2026

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Make Sure Your Track Is Actually Ready

Before sending anything, ask yourself :

Is the mix clean and club-ready ?

Does it match the label’s sound ?

Would it fit in a DJ set alongside their releases ?

Compare your track to recent releases from the label. If it doesn’t sit naturally next to them, don’t send it.

Research the Label First

Don’t mass-email 50 labels.

Study :

Their recent catalog

Whether they release your subgenre (minimal, industrial, melodic, peak-time, etc.)

If they are currently accepting demos

Submission guidelines on their website or social media

If a label says “No DMs,” don’t DM.

Professionalism matters.

Prepare a Proper Demo Package

Keep it simple and clean.

What to send :

1–3 finished tracks (not 10)

Private streaming link (SoundCloud private link is standard)

Download enabled

No huge attachments

No ZIP files unless requested

Do NOT send:

Unfinished loops

30-track albums

Low-quality MP3 exports

Export high-quality WAV or 320kbps MP3.

Write a Short, Professional Email

Keep it brief. Labels are busy.

Don’t Chase or Spam

After sending :

Wait at least 2–4 weeks.

One polite follow-up is okay.

If no reply, move on.

Silence usually means “not this time,” not “you’re bad.”

Build Relationships, Not Just Submissions

Techno is relationship-driven.

Better approach:

Support the label’s releases

Engage genuinely

Meet people at events

Network with artists already on the label

Many signings happen through trust, not cold emails.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Sending demos that don’t fit the label
❌ Copy-paste mass emails
❌ Sending unfinished tracks
❌ Being pushy
❌ Getting angry at rejection

Professional reputation travels fast in the techno scene.

Bonus : When Is Your Track “Label Ready” ?

Your track should :

Sound good in a club

Compete sonically with professional releases

Have a clear identity

Feel intentional and polished

If you’re unsure, test it in DJ sets first.

Final Advice

Think long-term.

One great release on the right label is better than five random ones.

Written by: administrateur

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