Your Bio
Is Killing Your
First Impression.
Most artist bios sound fake, over-written, or completely forgettable. And the worst part? Industry people can tell within the first three lines.
Your artist bio is not supposed to sound impressive. It is supposed to make people understand who you are quickly enough to care about what comes next.
The problem is that most bios are written like bad movie trailers. Generic hype. Empty adjectives. Forced drama. Long paragraphs nobody remembers.
Most Bios Say Nothing.
“Genre-bending artist.” “Unique sound.” “Passionate storyteller.” “Rising star.” These phrases mean absolutely nothing anymore because everybody uses them.
If your bio could belong to literally any artist, it is not a real bio.
Nobody Reads Your Entire Bio.
Fans skim. Bloggers skim. Playlist curators skim. Labels skim. Managers skim. Most people decide whether they care before they even finish the first paragraph.
Your opening lines need to answer three things immediately:
Who Are You?
Not your life story. Not your childhood. What kind of artist are you right now?
What Do You Sound Like?
Give people a sonic picture without sounding like a copy of another artist.
Why Should People Care?
What makes your perspective, energy, story, or sound worth paying attention to?
Instant Turnoffs.
Fake Industry Language
Stop writing like a press release from 2012. Write like a human being.
Massive Paragraphs
If people open your bio and see a wall of text, they are leaving immediately.
Comparing Yourself To Superstars
“The next Drake” or “a mix of Beyoncé and Billie Eilish” usually makes artists sound insecure instead of original.
Your Entire Childhood Story
Nobody needs six paragraphs about how you started singing at age five.
Your Bio Should Sound Like You.
The strongest artist bios feel specific. Real. Intentional. You should be able to hear the personality of the artist while reading it.
Good bios create curiosity. Bad bios try too hard to create importance.
Keep It Simple.
Artist Name + Sound + Identity + Current Momentum
That is the framework. Not fake hype. Not industry buzzwords. Just clarity.
Before You Publish Your Bio
□ Does it sound like a real person wrote it?
□ Could this bio belong to anybody else?
□ Can somebody understand your sound quickly?
□ Is it easy to skim on mobile?
□ Does it create curiosity instead of trying to sound important?
Clarity Beats Hype.
Your bio is usually one of the first things people see after hearing your music. It should support the identity of the artist — not distract from it.
The best artist bios are not the most dramatic. They are the ones that immediately make people understand who they are dealing with.
Stop trying to sound legendary. Start sounding real.
Build Your Identity.
Reviews, interviews, visuals, and artist branding all work together. Your bio is part of the story people remember.
Submit Your Music →







