
Heavy music editors skim hundreds of pitches every week. To break through the noise, you must make it effortless for them to understand who you are, why you matter right now, and how to hear the music immediately. This guide is the "Management Logic" blueprint for Rock and Metal artists. No fluff. No filler. Just the exact frameworks used to secure coverage in Metal Hammer, Kerrang!, and Classic Rock.
A great song will get you noticed. A great story will get you covered. In heavy music, editors skim hundreds of pitches a week. The ones that break through make it effortless to understand who you are, why this release matters now, and how to hear it fast.
This guide shows rock and metal artists how to craft a bio and press release that heavy-music editors will actually read. You will get structure, voice pointers, story angles, the top mistakes to avoid, a bio checklist, and a press release template you can copy today. No fluff. Built for the way Metal Hammer, Kerrang!, Classic Rock and specialist webzines work.
A strong bio is clear, specific and credible. It gives an editor enough context to frame you for their audience and enough flavour to feel your identity, then gets out of the way.
Aim for:
Example opener style: “Birmingham progressive metal quartet Feral Signal fuse polyrhythmic heft with widescreen hooks, channelling TesseracT and Gojira while carving their own path. New EP Ashes To Atlas lands 21 June, produced by Chris Coulter.”
Keep voice consistent with your vibe. If your music is venomous and direct, write tight, muscular lines. If it is cinematic and expansive, use vivid but disciplined description. Heavy-music editors respond to clarity, not purple prose.
To get the most out of music promotion services, your “angle” must be package-able. As a specialist music PR agency, we prioritize:
FFO (For Fans Of) Clarity: Helps writers self-select your band.
Producer Lineage: Mentioning a scene-relevant mixer adds instant credit.
The Stake: Why does this release matter now?
Tired of being ignored by the gatekeepers? Our music promotion agency specializes in the “No-Ignore” pitch. Get the Music Press Guide to see how we align story angles with a professional release timeline.
Create three lengths so editors can lift what they need without rewriting you.
Short bio, 50-70 words:
Long bio, 200-300 words:
Social bio, 120 characters and 2 lines:
Editors like angles they can package fast:
Editors want the facts first and a story that supports them. Use this skeleton and keep each section tight.
Headline:
Hook paragraph (the 5-second pitch):
Key details block:
Artist quote:
Body paragraph:
Assets and contact:
What should a press release start with? The headline and first line must answer what is happening and why it matters today. No throat-clearing, no biographies up top. Serve the news, then the story.
What does a typical press release look like? One page, clean, with bold headline, short paragraphs, links clearly labelled, and downloadable assets in one folder. Avoid PDFs that force downloads; an Electronic Press Kit page plus a concise email beats attachments every time.
Copy that respects an editor’s time performs better. Stampede Press writes artist bios and the press release for musicians you can send with confidence. Rob Town (Founder) specialises in heavy music, frames your story for relevant outlets, and aligns copy with a campaign timeline so coverage supports your release, tour and merch push. If you need a wider plan, see how a structured PR campaign links press attention to real outcomes.
Use this before you send anything.
For fuller planning around your release cycle and amplification across socials and email, Stampede shares practical guidance on music promotion strategies tailored to rock and metal.
It is concise, specific to your subgenre, includes a clear hook and proof, and points to what is happening now. One strong quote helps editors pull a line.
Clichés, no links, no quote, bloated history, inconsistent facts and walls of text that hide the signal.
Start with a factual headline and hook, present key info and links, add a short quote and supporting context, then list assets and contact.
Headline, dateline, hook paragraph, key info block, artist quote, body copy, boilerplate and assets plus contact.
The news itself: who, what, when and where to hear it, plus one flavour line.
A single clean page with short paragraphs, labelled links, a quote and a compact asset list that clicks through to a tidy EPK.
Editors open clear, relevant stories that respect their time. By building your artist bio in three versions and crafting a one-page press release for musicians that leads with the news, you remove the friction that kills editorial interest.
As a specialist Rock & Metal music PR agency, we know that professional assets are only the beginning. The real wins happen when your story is backed by the “Management Logic” strategy used by top music PR companies. If you are releasing music or preparing a PR campaign, you need to align your copy with a professional timeline to ensure your hard work results in national media authority and merch revenue.
Rock & Metal Music Promotion