EPK examples
EPK examples for musicians, bands, and DJs
Study professional electronic press kit examples built for booking agents, venues, labels, journalists, and promoters. Each example shows how to package music, visuals, credibility, and contact details into one focused page.
- A clear artist position in the first screen
- Playable music and video without extra clicks
- Press photos and quotes that help media work faster
- A visible booking or management contact path
Artist EPK examples
Best for solo artists who need a polished page with a clear sound, visuals, bio, and contact information.
Band EPK examples
Best for live acts that need to prove stage presence, press traction, and venue-ready professionalism.
DJ EPK examples
Best for DJs and producers who need to highlight mixes, club history, nightlife visuals, and booking details.
Music EPK examples
Best for comparing formats, sections, and layouts before choosing the right structure for your own EPK.
Luna Rose
Dreamy vocals over shimmering guitars — indie pop from the California coast.
Why this EPK works
Strong first impression: genre, location, press quote, and music are visible without making a booker hunt.
The Voltage
High-energy garage rock from Detroit. Loud, fast, and unapologetic.
Why this EPK works
A band-ready structure with live energy, press credibility, and a clear booking path.
Amara Osei
Neo-soul meets Afrobeats. Vocals that move through you.
Why this EPK works
A polished artist example that balances visual identity, biography, and media-ready proof.
DJ Sable
Deep house with a jazz heart. Berlin nights, analog warmth.
Why this EPK works
A DJ-friendly example with nightlife visuals, quick music access, and simple contact information.
Artist EPK examples
Best for solo artists who need a polished page with a clear sound, visuals, bio, and contact information.
Use this format when you want a page that answers the first questions an industry contact will ask: what does the act sound like, what proof exists, where are the visuals, and how do I contact the right person?
Band EPK examples
Best for live acts that need to prove stage presence, press traction, and venue-ready professionalism.
Use this format when you want a page that answers the first questions an industry contact will ask: what does the act sound like, what proof exists, where are the visuals, and how do I contact the right person?
DJ EPK examples
Best for DJs and producers who need to highlight mixes, club history, nightlife visuals, and booking details.
Use this format when you want a page that answers the first questions an industry contact will ask: what does the act sound like, what proof exists, where are the visuals, and how do I contact the right person?
Music EPK examples
Best for comparing formats, sections, and layouts before choosing the right structure for your own EPK.
Use this format when you want a page that answers the first questions an industry contact will ask: what does the act sound like, what proof exists, where are the visuals, and how do I contact the right person?
Build an EPK like these examples
Start with a professional structure, add your bio, music, photos, videos, press quotes, and contact details, then preview your page before publishing.
Create your EPK freeEPK example FAQ
What makes a good EPK example?
A good EPK example makes the artist easy to understand and easy to book. It should include a clear bio, music, video, press photos, credibility signals, and booking contact information.
Can I use these EPK examples as templates?
Yes. Each example shows a structure you can adapt for your own artist, band, DJ, or release page. You can start from EncoreSpot's templates and customize the content.
What is the difference between an artist EPK and a band EPK?
An artist EPK usually emphasizes identity, releases, visuals, and management contact. A band EPK often puts more weight on live performance, press quotes, tour history, and venue-ready details.