Bio & artist identity
Your name, logo, genre, and short bio at the top. The kind of two-sentence summary a promoter can quote in a flyer or a journalist can drop into a piece.
Electronic Press Kit
An EPK is how promoters, journalists, agents, and labels decide whether to work with you. Artist Kit gives you a music-first, booking-ready EPK at your own link — no design agency, no website project, no PDF wrangling.
The basics
An EPK (Electronic Press Kit) is the standard way an artist presents themselves to the people who can book, write about, or sign them. It bundles the essentials — bio, music, gigs, photos, and contact info — into one place a stranger can quickly understand.
Historically EPKs were PDFs emailed back and forth. Today they live at a link — easier to send, easier to keep current, and easier for a promoter to skim on their phone between sets.
Every working artist needs one. The moment someone replies to your music with 'send me your EPK,' you want a single URL that does the job — not a Dropbox folder, a half-built website, or a Linktree.
Every section is built around what bookers, journalists, and labels actually need to see — not a blank canvas you have to fill from scratch.
Your name, logo, genre, and short bio at the top. The kind of two-sentence summary a promoter can quote in a flyer or a journalist can drop into a piece.
Embed mixes, tracks, and streaming links so anyone landing on your page can hear you in seconds — not click out to find your sound.
A live, always-current list of dates. Promoters use this as social proof: if you're already playing, you're easier to book.
High-quality images promoters can grab for flyers and journalists can use in their pieces. Update them in one place and they're updated everywhere.
A clear, prominent way to reach you — with space for an agent or manager if you have one. No buried email, no scavenger hunt.
Past venues, collaborations, press mentions, and a complete set of social handles — so anyone can verify you're real and follow you in one click.
The same link works for every audience. They all care about different things — but they all need the same baseline information presented clearly.
They want to know if you'll draw a crowd and sound right for their room. Music, recent gigs, and a quick way to reach you do the work.
Submission forms almost always ask for an EPK link. One clean URL covers it — instead of a folder of attachments that may or may not get opened.
Writers on deadline need bio, photos, and a contact in under thirty seconds. Make their job easy and you're more likely to get the coverage.
A&Rs and sync supervisors check whether you have momentum and a clear identity. A focused EPK looks more serious than a feed of social posts.
A link hub is a list of destinations. An EPK is the destination — the place a booker, journalist, or label looks at to make a decision.
A link-in-bio measures success in clicks out. An EPK is judged on whether someone reaches out to book, write about, or sign you. Very different goal, very different layout.
Your sound leads, not your handle list. Embedded mixes and tracks mean visitors hear you on the page — not after a click out to another platform.
Everything a promoter or journalist expects, in the order they expect it. The page looks like a real artist site they can take seriously.
Step 1
Sign up, fill in your bio, drop in your music and gigs, upload a photo or two. Your EPK is live the same day.
Step 2
Drop the URL into DMs, emails to promoters, festival submission forms, your Instagram bio, and your booking email signature.
Step 3
Add a new release or a new gig and the same link reflects it. No re-uploading PDFs or sending fresh attachments to every contact.
A booking-ready EPK at your own link, in minutes. The same link you'll be sharing for years.