Here at Cyber PR, musicians frequently call and ask me to write and blast a press release.
The strongest reason to write a press release is for a particular event (like a show, a benefit, or a special occasion) OR for a very niche market (a “genre” of music is not a niche but a charity benefit or a tech related news piece like you are featured in a new app is!)
I discourage blasting but I do encourage well-researched outreach.
Here is how to create a press release in 8 steps.
Press Release Format:
A press release should be one page only and on your letterhead.
(If you do not have letterhead put your logo or your record company’s logo at the top of the page).
Step 1 – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
All Press Releases start with ‘FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE’ written in the top left hand corner, always in CAPS.
Step 2 – Contact Information
Next on the press release comes the contact Info which should include your first and last name (or the first and last name of a specific person) a phone number and an email address.
It should look like this:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Ariel Hyatt (212) 239-8384 Contact@CyberPRMusic.com
Step 3 – Headline
Next comes the headline, which should be simple and centered, and bold.
An example:
Eli Lev to Celebrate Release of EP with East Coast Tour
Step 4 – Subhead
This is an expanded part of the headline, which brings the reader in, and accentuates the headline by adding detail.
An example:
10-city tour supports Way Out West his new EP
Cities will Include Washington DC, Philadelphia, Boston, Portland, and Hartford.
Step 5 – Opening Paragraph: Location, Date & 5 W’s
Location: should start with (City, State) Date — This is so the reader knows where the information is coming from and how timely the information is. Example: (New York, NY) November 20, 2022.
And it should answer the 5 W’s: Who, What, When, Where & Why.
This initial paragraph should always grab the reader and answer all of the basic questions the reader might have. If the release is to promote a show or a specific event include the full date with day included, venue name, venue address, show time, ticket price, and ages as well as a link to the venue for further directions & information, and lastly the ticket purchase link.
Step 6 – Second Paragraph: USP / Unique Selling Point & Quotes
This is the “meat” of your press release so make it good. This will include further information, more details, an engaging story, a quote about your music, or about the topic of the release from reviewers, fans, a producer, a venue owner, or an industry tastemaker (because what other people say is always taken more seriously and is more believable than your own hype) and the USP – Unique Selling Point – a short description that captures the sound of the music (pretend that the reader may never actually hear it) and include what makes you stand out.
Step 7 – Final Details & Additional Contact Information
Here is where you would include all tour dates, a mailing address a link to your websites, a place where a photo can be downloaded a link where the music can be purchased or streamed and if you have a label contact add them here.
Step 8 – The 3 Hashtags – The End!
Now type this: # # #
This indicates that the press release is finished and there are no other pages in your release.
If you want to see an example of a website that is chock full of press releases we suggest taking a peep here.
Don’t forget to proof! (This also applies to blog posts and tweets ; )
Good point! Thanks.
What special events other than upcoming tours and album releases should I make press releases for? I don’t want to send them out for every little thing and have media see me as an unreliable source.
As I say in this post, be careful! There should be something “newsworthy” and local around a press release.
Thanks for the guideline, Ariel. I’m writing an indie press release, and the formatting helps so much. I’ve never written one before and didn’t know there is an “official” format for press releases.
Cheers!
Hi Endy!
I’m glad you found this helpful. Go forth and conquer 🙂 xA
Thank you Ariel. A really helpful article. The clearest guidance I’ve seen on writing a press release in twenty years as a professional musician! You are my new heroine!
You are THE best, Ariel! I was the designer on your website with 12South ages ago, and now I’m using it as my #1 reference as I release my own music. Thanks for all these great materials, I’m learning so much!
You are THE best, Ariel! I was the designer on your website with 12South ages ago, and now I’m using it as my #1 reference as I release my own music. Thanks for all these great materials, I’m learning so much!
Thank you, will use. 🙂