Distribute Music Free on Beatport: Fresh Talent Program
TuneDome to Distribute Your Dance Music Tracks on Beatport and Tens of Other Platforms Free
It’s hard to describe how excited I am to announce that my own label TuneDome (TuneDome.com) is now setting out to begin to distribute music free – EDM tracks and/or albums – on Beatport, Spotify, Amazon, iTunes, LastFM, Rhapsody, Shazam and many other hot electronic dance music platforms. It’s a no-brainer…

I can’t say that I can rest easy now, but I feel that I have achieved a lot in 5 weeks since my EDM site – BPMstr.com – went live. The most important question I asked myself last week is, “What is my EDM niche?” And the answers helped me define my first marketing campaign. Next, my electronic music site is fully operational (and now has the cool “black look”), and my 

So, my website about Electronic Dance Music is up and people can go there… that is, if I gave them a business card. Other than that, no one will know that I am an aspiring EDM producer. What now? Well, I have 2 choices: I can do nothing (like so many talented EDM producers do!) and hope that God will help me get Google rankings because I am cool, or I can roll up my sleeves and understand the inner workings of the worldwide web. I chose the second method….
Very well, ADE 2012 has wrapped up, and I had a wonderful time: I attended several excellent talk panels with EDM industry’s gurus. I hung out with Carl Cox. I interviewed the director of music for
Day 4 of the ADE 2012 (Amsterdam Dance Event) was as good as the other three: I learned a lot, I got motivated, I met cool people, and I partied. Again, I wish I had the time to upload all the video materials, but that takes a little bit of time because publishing them is a long and CPU-consuming and bandwidth-killing process. I have well over 10 videos all in all, and all of them will be published in the next 7 days – immediately upon my return to the USA. And this is why I say that ADE 2012 may be over soon, but fresh content will be coming up on BPMstr.com for at least a couple of weeks afterwards…..
So, Day Three was very busy because it got really technical for me. There were many cool opportunities to learn about the Electronic Dance Music Industry and about its players, its pitfalls and its opportunities. Everyone talked about festivals, and about moving toward harder and faster styles, and about effects of the global economy on industry trends. I now understand how managers and booking agents work, what recording studios and publishers can and cannot do for me as a music producer in the EDM genre, and I understand who is looking for new talent and their criteria for choosing new artists to work with…..