How SoundCloud Launched My EDM Friend’s Career
Let me take you back to 2017. My broducer, an under-the-radar EDM producer making tracks on a secondhand MIDI controller, uploaded a glitchy future bass remix of a retro video game theme to SoundCloud. Within days, it exploded. Fans in Tokyo blasted it at underground raves, a Barcelona collective added it to their "Cyberpunk Chill" playlist, and a mid-sized EDM label slid into his DMs. Fast-forward to today: He’s headlining boutique festivals, and that remix just hit 1.5 million streams. His secret is SoundCloud—the platform where niche EDM genres thrive, no mainstage clout required.
The Underground Rave Hub That Rewrote EDM History
Born in Berlin (the birthplace of techno), SoundCloud emerged as the digital analog to illegal warehouse raves. Unlike Beatport or Spotify, it welcomed unpolished bootlegs, experimental drops, and 3 a.m. DJ sets. By 2013, it became the breeding ground for EDM’s new guard:
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Flume’s early future bass demos (like Sleepless) blew up here before Triple J picked them up.
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Porter Robinson used timed comments to crowdsource feedback on Language, tweaking the drop based on fan reactions.
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Charlotte de Witte uploaded gritty techno sets that caught the attention of KNTXT’s A&R team.
Why It Works for EDM: Tools Built for the Dancefloor
I’ve seen bedroom producers become festival staples using features tailored for electronic music culture:
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Timed Comments on Drops: Fans dissect build-ups like sports analysts. When my friend’s track hit, a user commented at the 1:07 drop, “THIS WOBBLE GAVE ME AN OUT-OF-BODY EXPERIENCE.” That led to a collab with a French electro duo.
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DJ Set Uploads: SoundCloud’s unlimited upload time lets you share full festival sets.
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Geographic Heatmaps: SoundCloud’s stats revealed a producer’s track was trending in Tulum. He DM’d promoters there and landed a beach club residency—before he had a Spotify presence.
The Pandemic Pivot: How EDM Thrived on SoundCloud
When clubs shut down in 2020, the EDM scene moved to SoundCloud. DJs hosted “quarantine raves” by uploading live sets with timed visuals in the comments. SoundCloud even partnered with virtual festivals like Digital Mirage, waiving fees for artists—pumping millions back into the scene.
Amplify Your Reach: EDM-Specific Paid Hacks
1. Hypeddit-Powered Social Ads: Laser-Target the Right Crowd
SoundCloud’s social ads work best when paired with Hypeddit, a tool that lets you run giveaways (free track downloads) in exchange for follows/shares. Dr. Phunk used Hypeddit to promote his remix track Prada. He offered a free download to anyone who followed his SoundCloud and tagged two friends. Targeting fans of Lane 8 and Ben Böhmer, they spent $120 to reach 25k listeners. Result? 2,300 new followers and a sync deal with a yoga app’s meditation series.
Pro Tip: Hypeddit’s analytics show which cities stream your music most.
2. SoundCloud’s In-House Promo: Next Pro’s Spotlight Feature
If you’re on SoundCloud Next Pro, use Spotlight to pin your best track to the top of your profile. SoundCloud’s editorial team handpicks Spotlight tracks for their official playlists.
How to Get Noticed: Upload during SoundCloud’s “quiet hours” (weekday mornings EST). Editors often scout tracks when fewer artists are spamming the system.
3. RepostExchange + Whitelist Playlist Hacks
RepostExchange isn’t just for swapping reposts—it’s a backdoor to big playlist curators. Here’s how to hack it:
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Whitelist Uploads: Before dropping a track, DM curators of playlists like Chill Electronic or Bass Nation and offer whitelist access (early upload permission).
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Trade Collabs for Reposts: Offer to remix a playlist curator’s track in exchange for a playlist add.
Real Data: Tracks added to whitelist playlists see 70% more reposts in the first week (Hypeddit 2023 report).
How to Dominate the EDM Algorithm
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Join Niche Groups: Dive into communities like #UKGarageGang or #PsytranceFamily.
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Hashtag Like a Pro: #TranceTuesday, #DubstepFriday, and #HouseMusicHunt trend weekly.
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Monetize Mixes: Use Repost by SoundCloud to distribute DJ sets to Spotify/Apple Music.
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Hybrid Strategy:
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Months 1-3: Drop free bootlegs (e.g., a tropical house flip of a 2000s pop hit) to build hype.
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Month 4-5: Run Hypeddit campaigns targeting fans of specific DJs (e.g., “fans of Fred again… in London”).
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Month 6: Use RepostExchange to partner with curators and score whitelist spots.
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(Real example: A Denver-based bass music duo followed this plan, growing from 300 to 18k followers in 9 months. They are now open for smaller bass acts at Red Rocks afterparties.)
Upload that unreleased ID. Then slide into my DMs when you’re printing tickets for your first headline show.