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Guest post by Angela Mastrogiacomo of Soundfly's FlypaperIf ten years in the music industry has taught me one thing it’s this — a press release really can make or break a music journalist’s interest in your music. Period.While there are many other factors that come into play, so much starts with that initial narrative. In my own experience, as a writer for both my own blog and others, it’s this attention to detail, as well as your ability to play with words and paint a vivid, captivating picture for your reader, that takes a press release from “just OK” to “I’ve got to check these guys out!”In fact, one of my favorite bands to this day was introduced to me via a press releasewhen I first started my blog a decade ago. It was so cleverly written — not only was the flow of it strong, but it was funny, it took risks, and it paid off. It wasn’t just another vanilla press release — it took the audience into account (quirky, open-minded, and maybe even a little dark in terms of humor) and ran with it. That’s what I want to see in your press release — something highly formatted to your target audience.In the meantime, here’s what not to do.What Music Journalists Definitely DO NOT Want To See In Your Press Release
Whether or not music will even give your music the time of day is massively dependent on the quality fo your press release. Getting press coverage is hard enough, but. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/04/what-music-journalists-definitely-do-not-want-to-see-in-your-press-release