Fast Rhymes

How to Pitch Your Songs to Artists and Publishers

Writing great songs is only half the battle — getting them heard by the right people is the other half. Pitching your songs to artists, publishers, and industry professionals is a skill that can be learned and developed. Here's how to give your songs the best chance of landing with the right listener.

1. Research Your Targets

Before pitching, research the artists and publishers you're approaching. What kind of songs do they record or represent? What's the style, tempo, and subject matter they favor? A pitch that's well-matched to the target's taste is far more likely to succeed than a scattershot approach. Quality targeting beats mass submissions every time.

2. Prepare Professional Demos

Your demo doesn't need to be a finished master, but it should be clean, well-recorded, and clearly showcase the song's melody, lyrics, and structure. A rough recording with poor audio quality signals a lack of professionalism. Invest in making your demos sound polished enough to take seriously.

3. Lead with Your Strongest Material

When submitting songs, lead with your best. Most industry professionals will decide within the first thirty seconds whether to keep listening. Put your strongest, most commercially viable song first in any submission. Don't pad a package with weaker material hoping something will stick — quality over quantity always wins.

4. Write a Concise Pitch

Your pitch email or submission letter should be brief and professional. Include a one-sentence description of the song, why you think it's right for the target, and a link to the demo. Don't oversell or use excessive superlatives. Let the music speak for itself. Industry professionals appreciate brevity and professionalism.

5. Build Relationships

The music industry is relationship-driven. Attend songwriter events, open mics, and industry conferences. Connect with other writers, producers, and industry professionals. Many song placements happen through personal connections rather than cold submissions. Building a network takes time but pays dividends throughout your career.

6. Handle Rejection Professionally

Rejection is a normal part of pitching. A "no" doesn't mean your song is bad — it might mean it's not right for that particular artist at that particular time. Respond graciously to rejections, maintain the relationship, and keep pitching. Persistence and professionalism eventually open doors.

Conclusion

Pitching your songs successfully requires preparation, professionalism, and persistence. By researching your targets, preparing quality demos, and building industry relationships, you increase the chances of getting your songs heard and placed.

For help writing songs that are ready for pitching, Fast Rhymes provides songwriting tools that help you craft polished, professional lyrics.

29/09/2025

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