What Curators Really Look For
The truth? Most Electronic Press Kits (EPKs) aren’t bad — they’re just built for the wrong audience.
Artists craft bios like poetic résumés, pack in photos like it’s a modeling portfolio, and attach 47 links in the hope that something sticks. But playlist curators, bloggers, and music editors don’t think like fans. They think like gatekeepers — fast, selective, overloaded.
So what makes a curator stop, listen, and actually click “Add to Playlist”?
Let’s decode it.
⏱ First Impressions: You Have 7 Seconds
The curator opens your EPK. You have a few seconds. They’re not going to scroll yet. They glance. Here’s what they want to see:
- Artist name (clear, not hidden in a JPG filename)
- 1 standout photo (not 5)
- 1 or 2 music links — and yes, Spotify first
- A 2-line pitch: genre, vibe, and hook
That’s it. If they can’t describe your sound in one breath, they move on.
💬 Tell the Story, Not the Stats
Too many bios go like this:
“I started music at 11, then I did shows in Paris and Berlin, and my uncle was in a jazz band…”
Stop. A curator doesn’t need your resume. They need why your track matters now. Focus on:
- Mood: “Melancholic but punchy, like The Weeknd meets James Blake”
- Intent: “Written during a breakup, produced on analog gear in one night”
- Vision: “This song kicks off a trilogy about digital addiction”
That’s memorable. That’s human. That’s playlistable.
🧩 Link Logic: Fewer, Cleaner, Sharper
A good EPK has 3 essential links:
- Spotify artist page
- Streaming link to the track
- Socials or website (Linktree works fine)
Bonus: use smart links (like ToneDen or Hypeddit). One link, multiple destinations, less friction.
Never attach a ZIP file. Never use Dropbox. Curators hate extra steps.
📸 Visuals That Work
You don’t need a thousand-dollar photoshoot. Just one clean, authentic image that reflects your genre. No sunglasses-in-a-dark-room clichés unless it fits your identity.
Think:
- A moody portrait for ambient or indie
- Bright and punchy for pop or EDM
- Stylized grain for lo-fi or trap
Make it look like the music sounds.
🎯 The Real Psychology: Risk vs Reward
Curators don’t add songs just because they’re good. They add them because they:
- Match the vibe
- Sound polished
- Come from an artist who “gets it”
An EPK isn’t about impressing — it’s about reassuring. It says:
« I’m serious, I respect your time, and I’ve made this easy for you. »
That’s what builds trust. And trust gets you playlisted.