Posted: Oct 14, 2025
Category: Promotion
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**Guest post written by Cyber PR, originally featured on the Cyber PR Blog.

“I’ve poured my heart, time, and money into this record. How do I get high level music journalists or music blogs to review it?”
Every time, I feel as though I need to explain quite a lot — not because your music doesn’t deserve attention (it does), but because the entire landscape of music coverage has changed.
Albums still matter. They always will. But the harsh truth is this: the long-form album review is hanging by a thread.
This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t release albums. It means you have to be realistic about what PR looks like now.
+Why Publicity Does NOT Sell Music (and Why This is OK)
“Many sites have shifted away from reviews altogether. ‘Practically nobody was reading them,’ says Westhoff. The other issue is that it’s very difficult to describe music in words.” — Vice, “Is the Album Review Dead?”
That about sums it up.
“The album becomes more fragmented … you don’t experience all of the songs together at once … rather than individually.” — The Boar, “Are Constant Single Releases Killing the Album?”
Editorial coverage mirrors this behavior. Writers now focus on singles, premieres, and short-form features because they align with how audiences actually consume music.
When you release a 12-song project, editors don’t see one cohesive statement — they see 12 opportunities to highlight one song at a time.
+I Made a Full-Length Album Anyway
In other words: the media doesn’t just want your music; they want your narrative.
If you come to them with a great story, strong branding, and multiple singles to pitch, you give them something to work with.
They can’t review an album they don’t have time to hear — but they can feature a song with a great angle.
+How the Internet Has Revolutionized the Music Industry
Related Blog Posts:
+9 Reasons Your Band Isn't Getting Press
+4 ways musicians can use an EPK
+Getting your music covered: how to email press