Release Cadence Strategy
How often to drop music to stay in algorithms and build momentum.
Why Cadence Matters
Consistency signals to streaming algorithms that you're an active artist. Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music reward artists who release on a regular schedule with playlist placements and discovery features. Your release cadence tells platforms you're building momentum, not dropping one song and disappearing.
Weekly vs Monthly vs Seasonal
Weekly releases work for singles or producers building a fanbase. You stay visible, but fans may skip deep listening. Monthly releases balance discovery and album depth—ideal for EPs or coordinated single campaigns. Seasonal releases (every 3–6 months) suit artists with smaller fanbases or those perfecting craft over quantity.
Consider your capacity: quality matters more than frequency. A monthly single you're proud of beats four weekly forgettable tracks.
Singles vs EPs vs Albums
Singles (1–3 tracks) maximize algorithm visibility and let you test new sounds. EPs (4–6 tracks) build narrative and give fans something substantial. Albums (7+ tracks) establish legacy, but require more marketing muscle.
Mix formats. Release singles monthly, compile them into an EP quarterly, then an album yearly. This stacks wins: the album counts as a "new release," plus existing single fans already know half the tracklist.
Building Sustainable Pace
Map out six months of releases before you start. If you can't sustain it, start slower. Algorithms penalize artists who release frequently then ghost—consistency beats intensity.
Automate where you can: use scheduling tools to queue releases, batch-record content, and plan social posts. Leave headroom for unexpected opportunities (collaborations, remixes, features) that disrupt your schedule.