Featured
Why Artists Should Submit Their Music Directly to Honk Magazine
Honk Magazine is connecting artists to their fans like never before. In an industry where independent artists struggle to get their music into listeners’ ears, Honk Magazine is helping connect the dots between promising musicians and their fans. After five years of experience in the music PR industry, Honk Magazine has gained enormous respect for all artists by promoting their music and ensuring it reaches the right ears.
Since leaving SubmitHub, Honk Magazine has become fairly DIY, enabling artists to submit their music directly via Groover, Email, and MusoSoup. This method of directly submitting gets to the heart of the individual’s desire to create an artistic vision and helps ensure the artist receives the exposure they need to succeed.
Perhaps the hardest part for any independent artist is the investment required to promote their music. Honk Magazine notices such struggles and offers this platform for paid/promoted and free submissions. It gives every submission the attention it deserves, whether you’re an artist with a shoestring budget or a well-known musician eager to reach wider audiences.
But the effect doesn’t end there. Honk magazine partners closely with EARMILK and the other sister blogs, meaning that artists are featured not only on one outlet but also get coverage on several high-volume music blogs. What you Create is something every artist trying to increase their audience and establish themselves in this business is looking for.
While traditional submission portals often make artists feel like their work is simply another in a long line of submissions waiting to be processed, Honk Magazine takes the opposite approach of direct communication. If you are an independent artist, PR agent, record label owner, or manager, this direct connection enables a personalized promotion strategy.
Submitting your music directly to Honk Magazine gives you a fast response so you can get back to making music, individualized outreach to ensure your submission reaches the right person, and thoughtful, targeted promotion limited to a small number of artists. The objective is to move artists ahead of their fans and the industry to help these artists become brands and celebrities in their own right.
How to Submit Your Music
You make it a simple process for artists to submit to Honk Magazine. Musicians can submit their tracks via:
✅ Email (so that we can reach out directly)
→[email protected] (Active)
Whatever means an artist prefers, Honk Magazine delivers quality, industry exposure, and tangible outcomes.
If you are an artist looking for a real platform that values your craft, Honk Magazine is the place to submit your music. Whether you’re just getting started or have an established following, now’s your opportunity to be seen, heard, and put in front of a whole new set of ears.
Do you know an artist who needs this chance? Please share this with them! Honk Magazine is here to elevate independent musicians one song at a time.
Album Review
Katie Noir turns hidden emotions into a 23-track journey with debut album “What Is Unseen Still Exists”
Katie Noir has just released her debut album, “What Is Unseen Still Exists,” a 23-track concept album that turns overthinking, emotions, memories, and things left unsaid into a powerful musical story. The first half of the album explores the themes of the album with different levels of emotion.
“Bitches’ Road” examines how attitude and sarcasm can hide deeper issues, and “Soft Again (Don’t Quote Me On That)” continues the discussion of openness and the challenge of lowering emotional walls. “MC1” shifts into a more intimate space, about private thoughts and attachment, and “Only Us” captures the feeling of holding on to connections that are separate from the outside world. “Out of Touch” is about emotional distance and avoidance, and “Shake That Ass” uses energy and surface-level confidence to show how distractions can be a way to hide deeper feelings.
The following chapter deals with important relationships. “L.I.S.A.” adds an important character to the story of the album, too, and “Hey Sara” gives us a warm moment of thanks and friendship. “Lexi Waited Anyway” is about loyalty, patience, and miscommunication, whereas “The Sisterhood” is about the quiet power of real friendship.
The album then takes a turn into a more introspective mood with “What Is Unseen Still Exists,” where Katie Noir articulates that unseen emotions, memories, and personal experiences still exist and matter. “3:17 AM (Skit)” details the late-night overthinking, while “Morning Fever,” “University Day,” “My Dorm,” and “Hospital Day” explore day-to-day living, personal challenges, and emotional struggles. “Weekend” and “Sad Little Soul” follow the honest reflection through themes of regret and loneliness.
The final chapter is the road to acceptance and hope. “Relapse” is about the struggle to get past it, while “Lighthouse” is about finding the way in troubled times. The “Number 23” connects with the hidden details throughout the project, and “Music” shows the importance of taking your emotions and creating something creative out of them. Katie Noir ends with “Until Soon,” a note of growth and acceptance that tells us all that we experience becomes part of a larger story. “What Is Unseen Still Exists” is a thoughtful debut that gives voice to what often goes unseen.
Album Review
Patti Zlaket returns with “Dance Again,” an album filled with heart and renewal
Twenty years can change a person, but it can also sharpen an artist’s voice. Patti Zlaket’s new album, “Dance Again,” is an assured, heartfelt return that embraces life’s lessons and clings to optimism. It was produced by Tariqh Akoni with an all-star list of session musicians, including Lee Sklar.
The album opens with “Clock Keeps Tickin’,” a pensive reminder that time waits for no one and a call to take chances, not wait for the perfect time. The next track, “I’ve Got You,” is a song about trust, support, and being with the people that matter, with an air of reassurance. The title track, “Dance Again,” adds a bit more life to the album, telling everyone to loosen up and enjoy life with confidence and excitement.
The good vibes continue with “Let’s Move On”, a song about picking yourself up and making room for better days ahead. The second half is about love and growth from a different point of view. “Second Chance at Love” is a tribute to the guts it takes to find happiness again, and that new beginnings can happen at any age. And the next track, “Someone to Lie Down Beside Me,” is a sweet meditation on the companionship and comfort of meaningful relationships.
“Love is for You” is a simple message that love, kindness, and music only have more meaning when shared with others. Ending the album on the confidence and honesty of Patti Zlaket is “This Is Me.” This one is like a perfect ending to a journey of resilience, self-acceptance, and hope. “Dance Again” is a reminder that each new chapter can start with one step forward.
Connect with Patti Zlaket on | Website | FB | IG | Spotify |
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