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How To Avoid Fake Spotify Playlists

In a world where playlists are influencing culture, musicians everywhere are prey for scam artists hoping to make a quick buck.

Spotify playlists are the new music discovery platform. The right placement on a popular playlist can do more to help an artist’s career than a dozen posts on various music blogs could hope to accomplish. TikTok teens using music in their videos might have more influence on certain demographics, but playlists cater to a wider audience and can play a significant role in generating money for artists.

When someone finds a way to make money or have influence, there are always others who see that opportunity as a means to prey on the wishes of the desperate. Far musicians are hoping for playlist placement than there are playlists with great influence. As a result, people create fake playlists to con artists out of money and generate undue revenue for their music. 

Spotify does its best to prevent scam artists from thriving on their platform. Still, with a global user count numbering in the hundreds of millions, there is no way to police every individual’s activity. The good news is, with a keen eye and the tips shared in the video below, anyone can learn to spot fake playlists. Your career, your wallet, and your sanity will thank you.

A few key takeaways:

  • Never, under any circumstance, should you pay money for playlist placement.
  • You should avoid paying for access to playlist curators as well. If you do, you will likely find many people on the list ask for money in exchange for placement. Again, don’t give in. They’re only asking for money because they believe they are owed something for making something that people enjoy that costs them nothing.
  • Watch out for fake followers. When you find a playlist that interests you, click on the profile of the creator. If that person has multiple playlists with roughly the same follower count, that’s a red flag. They may be using fake followers to boost counterfeit streams.
  • Before you contact a curator, watch their performance. Check in over two weeks to see if the follower count changes. Monitor the songs that get added, how often the tracks change, etc.
  • To discern the legitimacy of a playlist’s influence, we recommend using what we call the ‘small artist’ trick. Find a playlist that interests you and search for an artist with a relatively small amount of monthly listeners. Look at that artist’s “About” page to see where their most is most popular. If they’re an artist from the United States, their top cities will likely be somewhere in the Us. If the top cities are remote parts of the world that are unlikely to know the artist, that may indicate that there are fake streams.
  • Speaking of fake streams, fake followers, and how playlist curators use them to get ahead. Using that same small artist, check to see how many plays they’re getting for whatever song is on the playlist that interests you. If the song is only on that playlist and the playlist has 1000 followers, then it shouldn’t generate thousands of plays. Most playlist subscribers don’t stream the same playlist multiple times per month, nor do they typically listen to the entire playlist each time they put it on.

Watch the video for more tips. 


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Exposing The Biggest Scams In Music Today [Video]

Scam artists continue to profit off the dreams of musicians caught in the struggle, but we have three tips that will make you more successful than their schemes ever could.

Scam artists will always exist in every facet of any business. That is because dreamers aspire to reach their goals, and enough of them are willing to pay for so-called experts to advise them that con artists can continue making money. After all, who wouldn’t want to be an overnight success?

There is a dark side to the world of self help and advice that rarely gets acknowledged. While many people do legitimately want to see artists succeed, there are many more who see aspiring stars are targets for their money-making schemes. As the saying goes, “If you want to make money in music, exploit the dreams of musicians.”

We’ve all seen these scams online. You probably see ads for playlist placements, music mentorships, and “direct access” to A&R reps on a regularly on social media. You may even consider looking into these services. The lucky ones don’t let their curiosity lead to spending money, but not everyone is that fortunate. A lot of artists spend money on these people and companies making impossible promises on the off chance they might be legit, and every single time, the artist ends up losing money without advancing their career.

The reason these scams never work out is because they ignore the three rules of music success:

  • Make great content
  • Network with your peers
  • Be a decent human being

Anyone promising mentorships in exchange for annual fees or placement in front of prominent tastemakers for a one-time charge are lying about the essential building blocks of any career. The musicians that are big right now, whether they’re bonafide celebrities or someone who seems to appear overnight, got where they are through hard work, networking, and being someone people enjoy knowing. Those three things are the cornerstone to any legitimate career in this, or any other, field.

That doesn’t mean that all scammers are bad people. Some do offer interesting advice in a very broad sense. They’ll talk about the need to hustle hard, believe in yourself, and consistently release new content to keep people engaged, all of which are good. But that kind of vague motivational fodder will only get you so far in this business.

For more insight on con artists and how to spot them, check out this video our friend Jesse Cannon made on the scammer you’re most likely to find in music.

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The Best Songs On TikTok Right Now (April 2020)

TikTok is growing faster than ever thanks to Coronavirus, and artists on the platform are witnessing a surge in engagement.

If you thought TikTok was the latest in a long series of ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ social media platforms – think again. The video-sharing app is growing in leaps and bounds, especially in light of COVID-19. The novel coronavirus is forcing everyone to stay inside, so anyone not yet converted to the world of TikTok now has plenty of time to assimilate.  

Artists on TikTok are benefitting from the rise in content and new users in significant ways. After Lil Nas X, Ashnikko, and Blanco Brown took off in 2019, the latest crop of talent building massive followings on the platform is more diverse than ever. There are newcomers to mainstream pop, such as Jack Harlow and Doja Cat, as well as countless independent musicians whose current level of success is owed almost entirely to the TikTok community. Still, others are the kind of bizarre talent that only sees recognition because the internet loves weird things.  

Some songs succeed on TikTok after users create action-based trends with a specific track. One recent example of that would be Powfu’s single, “Death Bed (Coffer For Your Head).” Users have paired the song with clips of themselves expressing their previously unspoken feelings for close friends. Check it out:

@sofie.loehmann

Seems a bit cheezy 🍕 ##AfterMyCoffee ##shecandoit ##normalpeople ##UltraSmoothMoves ##fyp

♬ death bed (coffee for your head) – Powfu feat. beabadoobee

The majority of TikTok users are young. 66% of the app’s audience is below thirty years old, and many of its most famous users are younger than twenty. More than 800 million people use TikTok every month. The average user spends 52-minutes on the app per day. That engagement is exposing people to a lot of music, and that discovery is propelling many unknown artists and groups to success.

Even more impressive is TikTok’s engagement stats. TikTok has the highest follower engagement rate in social media. The average post receives engagement from 8-9.5% of the account’s following. That figure doesn’t count the engagement on posts found by users browsing the platform’s many video feeds, which are far easier to navigate than Twitter lists or Instagram’s ‘For You’ page.

Still, finding the next big thing by scrolling TikTok posts can be difficult. The app currently has no chart system in place, so the only way to understand what songs are popular is to watch a lot of videos.

Every label and artist would love to experience the level of viral success TikTok can provide, but users of the platform tend to enjoy hip-hop and pop music more than any other genre. The artists seeing the most success on the app often blur genre lines while delivering infectious and straightforward melodies. As a result, a great hook or strong opening can mean more than the quality of a song overall.

We cannot tell you how to make TikTok users fall in love with your music. We are researching that topic, but so far, the best advice anyone has given us is to ensure your songs are as immediately catchy as possible. To further prove this point, we took the most popular songs on the platform right now (April 1, 2020) and put them into a Spotify playlist. Check it out:

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Music Biz 101: The Biggest Mistake Artists Make Pitching Playlists [VIDEO]

With competition for playlist placement at an all-time high, every action counts when it comes to engaging curators and tastemakers.

A 2018 report detailing consumer trends in the music business found that more people than ever are turning to the internet for music discovery. While a strong percentage of consumers still find new music through radio, there are more artists being found through streaming services such as Spotify and YouTube than any station could ever hope to showcase.

To be blunt: If you want to succeed in the music business today you absolutely need to have a presence on influential playlists.

The problem is, that if you know you need playlists, then everyone else knows that to be true as well. There are far more artists hoping to be discovered than influential playlist curators capable of showcasing their music. The competition is fierce, which means you only have a few moments to grab someone’s attention and make them take an interest in your music.

In this episode of Music Biz 101, host James Shotwell reveals the most common mistake musicians make when pitching playlist curators. Check it out:

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The number one mistake artists make when pitching playlists

One of the most sought-after rock playlist curators on Spotify reveals the error many musicians make when pitching them music.

We’ve said this before, but it bears repeating: Playlists are the new mixtapes. Playlists are also the new radio. More people are discovering and developing a deep appreciation for emerging talent through playlists than any other music platform, and that trend shows no signs of stopping or slowing anytime soon. If you want to make it, you need playlists.

Recently, we shared a list of must-have contacts for rock playlist and pop playlist curators. The response has been great, but we’ve been hearing from playlist makers that not all pitches are the same. Several artists have been shut out of playlist opportunities altogether because they make a single mistake, and when the competition is fierce, that mistake can make all the difference.

Jesea Lee, playlist curator and High Road Publicity team member, has been inundated with requests for placement on his many playlists in recent weeks. The one thing that turns him away from an artist’s music above all else is specificity.

“If you’re sending your music to a playlist curator, always send a link to the song you’re pushing, NOT a link to the entire album or Spotify profile. If you do send a link to the entire album, make sure to mention which track is the priority.”

Curators like Jesea receive hundreds of submissions a week (some get that in a day), and you cannot expect them to listen to an entire album to find a track they like enough to add to their playlist. If you want them to give your music a chance, make it as easy as possible for them. If they do like the track, then they can easily find the rest of your music from that first song link.

To be clear, simplicity and focus should be the goal of every pitch. Know what you’re promoting and why it would be a good fit for the playlist you’re pitching. Give the person you’re pitching everything they need to understand why your song is deserving of placement. That won’t guarantee inclusion, but it will make success more likely.

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Artist Advice Editorials Industry News News

64 pop/indie Spotify playlists you should be pitching (and how to reach them)

Spotify playlists are shaping the future music business, but reaching the curators of the most influential lists is often incredibly difficult. That is, until now.

Playlists are the primary means of new music discovery for millions of people around the world, and Spotify is leading the charge. The streaming giant has many amazing playlists for every niche in music, and hundreds more are added with each passing day. A great playlist placement can change someone’s career, but all too often the contact information for influential curators is hard to find.

We’re here to help. With the assistance of several friends in the music business, we have uncovered more than sixty (sixty) influential pop and indie playlists that are actively helping artists at every level raise their profiles on a global scale. We’ve also found the people behind them, or at least, a means to contact those behind them, and we’re giving that information to you for free today.

Smart artists will recognize that this is not a perfect solution to pitching problems they currently face. There are thousands of artists working every day for increased exposure through Spotify playlists, and many of them will likely be reaching out to these same contacts in hopes of being noticed. We ran tips to help you stand out while playlist pitching last month, and we will run more in the months to come. Be professional, be engaging, and always be true to yourself. Let the curators know what makes you and your music unique.

Name Contact Info
30 Blooming Now newandblooming@gmail.com
Alem (Pop – Rock – Indie) contacto@alemanaldia.com
Anime Openings and Endings jose1692@hotmail.es
Art pop @catalogue.fm
Aux God plvlists@gmail.com
Bad Guy – Billie Eilish – Top 40 mr.e@rps-fam.com
beach goth @yung.thuy
Bedroom Pop & Cool Rock @dartness_
California Teen/Surf Rock/Psychedelic Rock/Garage Rock/Indie Rock/Dream Pop/Lo-Fi/Synth-Pop/Etc/ alanscorrales@gmail.com
chill grooves goodie bag @thedanaleigh
CloudKid hello@cldkid.com
Cold Dark Soul Indie Pop @AnwarSawyer
CTRL-ALT-POP @camilomusic94
Cvlturerecords cvlturerecs@gmail.com
Dominic Kyle Gonnella spotifyplaylistguy@gmail.com
Feel Good Travel Roadtrip Songs @jude7im
Fresh Indie/Alt/Rock/Pop jwendelwozniak@gmail.com
Fresh Music Friday music@beachlife.asia
Gay love songs – boys about boys [best of] marinus@aballadeer.com.
Groovy Pop Beats | by Axel Murano | @axelmurano.
hype pop a.just.records@gmail.com
HYPEBEAST | TOP HITS 2019 | RAP TRAP URBAN R&B INFO@BEDROOMTRAP.COM
Indie / Indie Pop / Synthpop mattyresch@gmail.com
Indie Alternative Synth Pop submit@slaysonics.com
Indie Brasil – Indie Brasileiro @bestofspotify_
Indie electro-pop @
Indie Flex AbraxPhaeton@gmail.com
Indie Friday // Indie Pop INFO@THEINDIEFOLX.COM
Indie Music VibeS IG-@Soundboination
Indie Pop Classroom Playlist @thecolorfulteacher
Indie Pop Mish Mash @paulalexgray
INDIE POP. The Best of Now submit@slaysonics.com
indie synth pop – upbeat jams  @feldya
INDIE SYNTH POP- 2019 (sullivansoundltd@gmail.com)
Indie Waves 2019 | New Releases | Indie Pop | Indie Rock | Alternative | @indie_waves
Indie/Pop/Rock/Folk spotify@nocta.ch
Lava – Still Woozy – Indie Music mr.e@rps-fam.com
Lo-Fi | Dream Pop | Bedroom | Indie @tunadisplay
Lo-Fi Indie : Bedroom Pop – Dream Pop/Shoegaze | MCKEANE @shane_mckeane
Melodico Music info@melodicomusic.se
Midwest Emo Revival / Post Indie-Rock IDK natgoodhue@gmail.com
Minor Stream/Indie Pop @msip_spotify
New Beat nbodemos@gmail.com
Next Gen wearekooluk@gmail.com
Night & Chill @sadboihour_now
Playlist on top playlistontop@gmail.com
Pop Trending info@experiencemusicgroup.com
Shrednector (Pop Punk / Indie Rock) @shrednector
Sounds of Indie Music indiecastle@gmail.com
Sounds of Indie Pop indiecastle@gmail.com
Spin the indie @isickaf.
Spring is in the ear (@sabrinasterntal
Sr. Indie Jonatanjoein@hotmail.com
studying + reading @gloomradio
Swiff Fresh finds playlist@swiffbeats.com
talkaboutpopmusic.net steve@talkaboutpopmusic.com
The Mix Today’s Top Hits dopewiterz@gmail.com
Thursday I’m In Love: Playlist 80s. 90s. Retro. New Wave. Synth Pop. & Indie @thursdayiminlove
Tomorrowland is love islovegroup@gmail.com
Ultimate Pop-Indie-Rock spotifnation@gmail.com
Wanted: Rising Talents submissions@independentdigital.com.
West Coast chill Westcoastchillplaylists@gmail.com
what the pop? steve@talkaboutpopmusic.com
Your Own music YourOwnMusic@outlook.Com
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50 Hard Rock/Pop Punk Playlists you should be pitching (and how to reach them)

Playlists are the new mixtapes. If you want to get ahead in your career, you need to appear on these popular playlists.

Music discovery has changed. The days of people sharing MP3s online or burning one another CD-Rs in their bedrooms with artwork made from a Sharpie are now considered the dark ages. Today’s music listeners discover new artists and songs through playlists, but discovering the right playlist for your music and how to contact the curator behind it can feel impossible at times.

We’re here to help. With the assistance of several friends in the music business, we have uncovered fifty (50) influential hard rock and pop punk playlists that are actively helping artists at every level raise their profiles on a global scale. We’ve also found the people behind them, or at least, a means to contact those behind them, and we’re giving that information to you for free today.

Smart artists will recognize that this is not a perfect solution to pitching problems they currently face. There are thousands of artists working every day for increased exposure through Spotify playlists, and many of them will likely be reaching out to these same contacts in hopes of being noticed. We ran tips to help you stand out while playlist pitching last month, and we will run more in the months to come. Be professional, be engaging, and always be true to yourself. Let the curators know what makes you and your music unique.

Name Contact
2019 Christian Rock indiechristiansound@gmail.com
All Things Heavy jesea@highroadpublicity.com
beach goth @yung.thuy
Beats n Bass [ drum and bass / dance / liquid ] @katetechtastic
Best Covers sol@safetyorange.com
Best Of: Metalcore / Hardcore @DekaAgency
Big Rock Bangers wearekooluk@gmail.com
blessings for sleepy sad teens @cryopotato
Breakout Core (Metalcore. Melodic. Post Hardcore) info@beheadingthetraitor.com
Early 2000s Pop Punk Nostalgia rnwalsh17@gmail.com
ELITE TRAINING @ToddActual
Euro Punk info@antillectual.com
Feesten/Uitgaan Remco.wiefferink2002@gmail.com
forever pop punk @blfarber
GHOST VIBES | EMO/POP PUNK @danplourenco
Happy Hardcore @Jalmaan
Hardcore Bangers @samimadlad
Hardcore Christian Fight/Motivation Workout @ivanrmacias
HARDCORE OLD SCHOOL (1978-1989) @hardcoreoldschool
Hardcore Workout Music by Fitify martin@fitifyapps.com
Hardcore/Punk Crist√£o Abril meneguel@gmail.com.
HEAVY METAL / METALCORE / HARDCORE – COLLECTION @ChrisMavUK
Japanese Punk-Alternative @teachoice.
KOREAN HEAVY METAL | SCREAMO & K-HEAVY METAL | KPOP HEAVY METAL @aryatully
Makeout – Kinky Version – Sexy songs @lissaa_souza
Memes do Hardcore – HC BR @memesdohardcore.
Metal United – Metal / Metalcore / Deathcore / Rock / Post Hardcore / Alt metalunitedinfo@gmail.com
Metalcore / Screamo / Postcore / Hardcore metalcore.playlist@gmail.com
Metalcore/Deathcore/Post-hardcore/Alternative themetalcorecommunity@gmail.com
Midwest Emo Revival / Post Indie-Rock IDK natgoodhue@gmail.com
Music for the Ginger Soul gingersoul1019@gmail.com
New Pop Punk Essentials gavinbonar@gmail.com.
Now That’s What I Call Breakdowns! jordan@killthemusic.net
Pop Punk & Positivity by Get Your Head Straight @getyourheadstraightuk
Pop Punk + @de7eck
POP PUNK 2019 ukpoppunkers@gmail.com
Post Hardcore Indonesia @rayasabari
PROZAC @ollydagger
Punk Love (716-563-5856)
Rap Hardcore / Hip Hop Hardcore / Rap Underground / Rap Latino / Rap Chileno / Rap Mexicano @bonnevilla
Rock/Punk/Metal Mix qbroadwaymp29@gmail.com.
rock/reggae/hardcore/ laurocg@gmail.com
Screamo x Metalcore x Post-Hardcore x Hardcore x Metal @gmcauchi_
Shrednector (Pop Punk / Indie Rock) @shrednector
Spring is in the ear @sabrinasterntal
Suomi Finland Punk & Rock sofapromotions@gmail.com
Tight Jeans, Tighter Scene jesea@highroadpublicity.com
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Spotify Officially Releases its Playlist Submission Feature

Another week, another major announcement from Spotify.

Just a few short months after announcing a beta launch, Spotify has officially released its playlist submission feature. The new tool allows artists, labels, and teams to share new music directly with the company’s editorial team for playlist consideration.

In an announcement made through the company’s official blog, Spotify claims more than 67,000 artists and labels submitted music since the feature started being tested in July. They also say that their official playlists have added more than 10,000 artists for the first time thanks to the move.

Taking those numbers into consideration, it appears that artists who submitted content during the beta testing period had (roughly) a 1 in 7 chance of being added to a playlist. With the official release upon us, not to mention a fresh wave of promotion for the feature, it’s likely those odds will change as the number of daily/weekly submissions begin to rise.

To access the playlist submission feature, artists and their teams must first join Spotify For Artists, which offers musicians the ability to track their plays, view analytics, see fan base demographics, and most recently, the ability to upload music directly. The company suggests adding pre-release music as early as possible, preferably weeks before its set to go public, but not later than seven days before its street date. From there, artists select one song they believe in and fill out a submission form. Artists will need to choose several relevant genre and thematic tags, as well as offer insight into the story behind their music. A full description of the submission process, as explained by the Spotify editorial staff, can be found below:

Spotify also released several case studies to show the effects of successful playlist submissions. For example, when Gustavo Bertoni’s song “Be Here Now” was selected to appear on the Acoustic Morning and Fresh Folk playlists, his monthly listeners jumped from 7,000 to 617,000.

Alt-rock band Yonaka saw their numbers increase from 82,000 to 290,000 when they were added to New Music Friday, and the Dutch rapper Bryan Mg went from 4,600 to 33,000 monthly listeners after ending up on the La Vida Loca playlist.

How the streaming revenue of the artists studied changed after inclusion in the company’s playlists was not included in the Spotify case studies, but each undoubtedly saw an increase. The rise in total listeners also helps Spotify’s larger narrative regarding how its platform can raise an artist’s overall profile, which in turn should lead to more (or more significant) touring opportunities.

Spotify added that even when songs aren’t selected for playlists before their official release, having tracks submitted through the uploading feature with all their metadata included means they’re ready for inclusion on future playlists if that comes to pass.

In short, it’s worth the effort for artists to try their luck with playlist submissions.

A video promoting the new tool was also released alongside the official announcement. You can view it below:

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Spotify now offers a playlist submission tool

Playlists are the new mixtapes.

Actually, that’s not entirely true. Very few people, if anyone, ever made good money off a mixtape. Playlist placement, however, can be life-changing. As more and more people turn to premium streaming services to access and discover music, curated playlists have become increasingly important in the overall ecosystem of the industry. Playlists can make people household names, and it can also encourage consumers to seek out “deep cuts” they may not have previously considered playing.

But how do you get on these lists? For the most part, the answer has long been to know the right people. If you know someone with a popular playlist or know someone who knows someone, then maybe — just maybe — you can get your song considered for inclusion. It’s a historically messy process with no clear path to results.

That is, until now.

Spotify’s new playlist submission feature aims to demystify the curation process for some of the world’s most popular playlists by creating a portal for consideration any artist can access. The new feature is part of its Spotify for Artists and Spotify Analytics tools, but it is still in beta and therefore not perfect.

If you’re an artist, label or manager with access to these tools, you’ll be able to choose one song to submit. That may seem strict, but the company tried to offer as much info as possible about the decision and tool with a recent statement:

“It’s important to give us as much information about the track as possible — genre, mood, and other data points all help us make decisions about where it may fit. You can note the instruments on it, whether it’s a cover, and the cultures you or the song belong to. The data you share will be complemented by what we already know about you — what else your fans listen to, what other playlists you’ve appeared on, etc. Editors will be searching through submissions based on the information you share to find unreleased music to consider for their playlists.”

Later in the release, Spotify notes that “as long as you tag and submit your track seven days in advance, the song you select will automatically appear in every one of your followers’ Release Radar playlists. This way you have control over which single you’re promoting to your fans.”

It’s unclear how well this last bit well function, especially for artists whose followers follow dozens of artists (or more), but the concept is definitely an alluring one. That power would allow artists to control the conversation around their music as it relates to discovery in a manner no other streaming service allows.

What do you think? Tweet at @Haulix and let us know your thoughts on these new developments.

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