Dance Music Promotion That Works: Real Feedback, Real Shares, Real Results
You’ve just finished a track that slaps harder than a sub-bass in a warehouse rave. The synths are icy, the build-up is tighter than a DJ’s cue transition, and the drop is a pure serotonin. You send it to a dozen playlist curators and blogs, imagining it lighting up dance floors from Ibiza to Brooklyn. Two weeks later, your inbox is emptier than a silent disco at noon.
This is the daily life for too many electronic producers. There have never been more ways to share music, but on Groover, a platform built by humans for humans, your track doesn’t just vanish into the algorithmic abyss.
Groover works as a VIP backstage pass for your music. Instead of blasting your SoundCloud link everywhere, you handpick curators who live for electronic music—think blogs that breathlessly cover underground techno, playlisters who obsess over melodic house, or labels hunting for the next drum & bass anthem.
Each contact costs a few Grooviz (think of them as golden tokens for your track’s destiny). Most cost €2, with a tiny fraction of elite curators—the ones who could make your track go viral—costing a bit more. If they don’t reply in 7 days, you get your tokens back. No ghosts, no guesswork.
Since 2018, Groover’s curators have shared over 1 million tracks—including a lot of electronic bangers. One rising UK producer (who asked to stay anonymous) sent a leftfield garage track to niche curators through Groover. Two weeks later, it was spinning on a Berlin radio show known for breaking experimental electronic acts. Another artist landed a label deal after a curator compared their progressive house demo to “early Pryda, but with more bite.”
But here’s what really sets Groover apart: it’s not just about getting heard—it’s about how you get heard. Curators aren’t bots trained to chase streams. They’re real people paid to listen, whether they love your track or not. That means honest feedback, not automated “cool track!” replies.
EDM’s history is rooted in underground scenes—warehouse parties, pirate radio, mixtapes traded like contraband. Groover taps into that spirit. It’s why over 2,500 curators, many specializing in electronic subgenres, stick around. They’re not drowning in generic submissions; they’re discovering tracks that match their vibe.
Signing up is free, and you’ll get Grooviz to start your campaign immediately. No AI, no “premium tiers,” no playlists clogged with royalty-free deep house, but just a straight shot to curators who still believe music discovery should feel human. After all, would you trust a robot to understand the euphoria of a perfectly timed breakdown?
If your latest ID is rotting in a promo email graveyard, give Groover a spin. Your track deserves more than a spot between spam and a VPN ad.
Claim your free Grooviz and start pitching here—because even the filthiest bassline needs a stage.
PS: Groover’s curators have collectively spent over 200,000 hours reviewing music. That’s enough time to listen to every track on Beatport’s Top 100… 500 times over. Now that’s a marathon session.