
Submit 90s Rock & Coldwave to SOUNDSPHERE Music Blog
Music Blogger

SOUNDSPHERE
Music Blogger
FOLLOWERS
By
SOUNDSPHERE
Accepting:
90's Rock, Coldwave, Experimental
APPROVAL RATE
5%
.png)
PER SUBMISSION
.png)
$
6
Direct promotion · Curator feedback guaranteed

Artist Guide: How to Submit Your Music to SOUNDSPHERE
Before you hit submit, double-check that your sound actually fits what SOUNDSPHERE is looking for. This music blog is focused on 90's Rock — and SOUNDSPHERE can tell immediately when a track doesn't belong. Sending music outside the accepted genres wastes your submission fee and your shot at a real placement. Match the vibe, match the genre, then submit.
This part isn't optional. Your track needs to be properly mixed and mastered before it lands in SOUNDSPHERE's inbox. A great song buried in a muddy mix doesn't get placed — it gets passed. Take the time to get your production right, because the quality of your sound is the first thing a music blog curator evaluates. If it doesn't hit professionally, it doesn't hit.
Every direct submit campaign runs for 10 days. If SOUNDSPHERE hasn't responded within that window, you get your $6 back — no questions asked. That's the One Submit guarantee. So there's no risk in trying. Submit your track, let the process run, and either walk away with a placement or walk away with your money.
Whether your track gets accepted or not, SOUNDSPHERE leaves personal feedback on every submission. That's rare — and genuinely useful. Don't just read it and move on. The notes you get back are a direct signal from someone who listens to 90's Rock music all day. Use that insight to sharpen your next release, improve your sound, and come back stronger.
Got a track that doesn't fit anywhere neat? Good. SOUNDSPHERE is built for exactly that. This is one of those rare spots on the map where a 90s rock coldwave experimental music blog submission actually lands in front of people who care - not bots, not passive scrollers, not some algorithm deciding your fate. Real listeners who dig for new music the old way. While most music news cycles burn through content at a pace that means nothing, SOUNDSPHERE runs on genuine attention. It's an online music publication that treats music discovery like it still matters - because over here, it does. If you've been grinding in the underground and wondering where your good music actually belongs, this might be it.
About SOUNDSPHERE & the SOUNDSPHERE music blog
SOUNDSPHERE has carved out something real in the independent music blog world - a trusted voice for sounds that don't sit still and don't apologize for it. No trending-topic chasing. No playlist-farming. Just honest, direct engagement with artists who are either pushing something forward or dragging something gloriously backward from the 90s. It publishes content that treats music discovery as something worth slowing down for, which is genuinely rare right now. If your music is shoegaze adjacent, soaked in lo-fi texture, or built on the cold bones of post-punk vibes, SOUNDSPHERE already gets what you're doing.
The site lives at soundspheremag.com and functions as a real online music publication with a strong focus on genre-specific depth - not surface-level summaries written for a general audience that doesn't know Bauhaus from a building. Beyond music reviews, there are artist interviews, industry news, and album deep-dives that give actual context. That's rarer than it sounds. Finding a blog in the global music industry that knows the difference between coldwave and dark post-punk without googling it first? Honestly, that's half the reason SOUNDSPHERE has built the credibility it has. It's one of the best music blogs working these corners of the contemporary music underground right now, and that's not hype - it's just what happens when a site stays focused and doesn't try to be everything to everyone.
Who Is SOUNDSPHERE For?
SOUNDSPHERE is for independent musicians who exist somewhere outside the mainstream artists lane - full stop. If your reference points include Bauhaus, Unwound, My Bloody Valentine, or any strain of noise-damaged guitar music with roots in the 90s, your instincts are already pointed in the right direction. Emerging artists working in coldwave, experimental rock, or post-punk adjacent spaces will find an underground music blog curator who actually listens with ears tuned to the same frequencies you're operating in. It's not about clean production or radio-ready anything. It's about whether the track has something real inside it.
Established artists who've been working these genres for years sit alongside new artists still finding their footing - which makes the readership genuinely mixed and genuinely engaged. These are people who know their favorite artists inside and out and are actively hunting for the next thing that earns a place in that same category. Up and coming artists who haven't been sanded down yet, who are still making music that sounds like a decision rather than a demographic - that's who SOUNDSPHERE is actually looking for. And look - if you've been told your music is too weird for mainstream or not weird enough for the avant-garde, this is the middle space that doesn't ask you to compromise. Submitting music here means your track lands in front of someone who genuinely gives a damn about the DIY ethos and what it sounds like when independent artists make something entirely on their own terms.
Why a 90s Rock Coldwave Experimental Music Blog Submission to SOUNDSPHERE Makes Sense
Honestly, there are a thousand places you can throw your track into the void and hear nothing back. SOUNDSPHERE is not that. A blog feature here isn't a buried Spotify placement that evaporates after 48 hours - it lives on the site, it's indexed, it's searchable, and it becomes part of your press story in a way that an algorithmic playlist spot never will. For artists working in experimental rock or coldwave, written coverage from a trusted voice in the music business carries real weight when you're building a narrative around your work. That context matters. A lot.
The site publishes daily content - music reviews, news, artist interviews, new releases, playlists - which means fresh material keeps pulling readers back and keeps creating new entry points for your music to reach someone who needed to hear exactly what you're making. When your track gets reviewed here, it gets placed inside a lineage. Connected to the music genres and sonic histories that actually shaped what you're doing. That's how new music discovery works when it's done right - through genuine curatorial taste rather than engagement farming.
So yeah - SOUNDSPHERE operates as the most trusted voice in its specific lane because it hasn't tried to bleed into other genres just to chase numbers. That focus is precisely what makes coldwave music blog features here mean something real. For independent artists trying to build something that lasts, a placement on an independent music blog with this kind of niche credibility is a brick in the foundation. Not just a temporary spike in your streaming platforms stats. Submit music to experimental music blog coverage that actually holds up - that's the move.
How to Pitch Your Music
Direct and low-friction. You submit your track through One Submit, pay the one-time $6 fee, and SOUNDSPHERE's underground music blog curator personally reviews what you've sent. No middleman algorithm deciding whether your song gets heard. A real person with real ears and real taste in these music genres actually listens - which is not as common as it should be in the indie music world right now (yeah, really).
After you submit, the curator goes through your track and either moves forward with experimental rock music coverage or sends back honest feedback on why it wasn't the right fit this time. Either way, you're not left hanging in silence. If you've spent any time submitting music to blogs the old-school way, you know that silence is basically the norm. Not here. Whether you've got an album rolling out, a single dropping, or a demo you just believe in - this is the kind of coverage that adds up over time. Get featured on music blog placements that actually stick, not ones that vanish in 72 hours.
Here's the thing. $6 for a guaranteed personal listen from a curator running one of the more credible coldwave experimental music promotion outlets going right now is a reasonable ask. Head to One Submit, write a clean pitch, and let the music carry it from there. That's the whole play for 90s rock blog promotion that actually means something - and for independent artist music blog submission, this is about as straightforward as it gets.
Pitching to curators is the move. So is how One Submit works for independent artists. Both matter. One submission won't move the needle on its own. What playlist curators look for is the bigger picture.
Frequently Asked Questions
What genres does SOUNDSPHERE accept for the SOUNDSPHERE playlist?
SOUNDSPHERE accepts 90's Rock, Coldwave, Experimental. Make sure your track fits the playlist vibe before submitting.
How much does it cost to submit music to SOUNDSPHERE?
A direct submission costs $6 USD per track. This one-time fee covers the curator's review time and guarantees personal feedback.
How long does it take to get a response from SOUNDSPHERE?
Most submissions receive a response within 7–14 days. Every track submitted gets reviewed and receives curator feedback.
Is curator feedback guaranteed?
Yes. Whether your track gets placed or not, SOUNDSPHERE provides personal feedback on every submission through One Submit.