Stop Waiting for Perfect - Simply Release the Damn Music
Most artists treat releasing music or content like it’s the old music industry.
Like every post, every video, every track has to be perfect before anyone hears it — because they think they only get one shot.
But that mindset is exactly what slows artists down.
The truth is, you don’t need a label rollout or a perfectly polished campaign anymore. You can put something out today and the audience will tell you what resonates within minutes. Meanwhile, too many musicians are stuck overthinking mixes, debating artwork, or sitting on songs for months while the world is ready to listen.
Put your work out there.
See what happens. See what people react to. See which door opens.
Not everything has to be perfectly edited, perfectly mastered, or perfectly packaged. Sometimes the rough demo, the weird video, or the late-night idea connects more than the thing you spent six months polishing.
Then you do it again.
Maybe someone in the comments says, “This part is amazing.” Maybe people latch onto a lyric, a riff, or a strange visual you didn’t expect.
So you lean into that. You try something new. You release again.
It’s iterative. Just like making music.
The Audience Knows More Than Your Inner Critic
Your internal doubts will always have opinions. Your bandmates might have opinions. Your friends definitely have opinions.
But the audience has answers.
Pay attention to the comments. Pay attention to what people replay, share, and respond to.
That feedback is far more valuable than sitting around wondering, “Do you think this is good enough?”
A lot of artists get stuck because of insecurity. They think every release has to be the big one. They think if a video only gets a handful of plays it means they failed.
But that’s old thinking.
You don’t get one shot anymore.
You get hundreds of swings.
Every post is practice. Every release is a signal. Every reaction is information.
The artists who grow today aren’t the ones waiting for perfect.
They’re the ones showing up, experimenting, listening, and doing it again tomorrow.











