If you make electronic music and want to get your demos heard by real labels, you have probably come across both LabelRadar and TogetherWeRise. Both platforms connect independent artists with record labels, but they take very different approaches. This comparison covers the key differences so you can decide where to spend your submission budget.
| Feature | LabelRadar | TogetherWeRise |
|---|---|---|
| Genre focus | All genres | Electronic music only |
| Labels available | ~500 (all genres) | 200+ (electronic only, ranked) |
| Feedback guarantee | 14 days | 7 days |
| Feedback quality | Basic pass/fail | Ratings + written notes per label |
| Price per submission | ~$1–2 | $2 |
| Missed deadline refund | Yes | Yes — automatic, no request needed |
| Label ranking data | No | Yes — Beatport + Traxsource chart data |
| Label profile pages | JS-rendered, minimal info | Full profiles with roster, stats, bio |
| Smart links | No | Yes |
| Presave campaigns | No | Yes |
| Download gates | No | Yes |
| AI ad studio | No | Yes (Meta, TikTok, YouTube, Reddit) |
| AI music detection | No | Yes — audio fingerprinting |
| Duplicate check | No | Yes |
LabelRadar has a larger total label count, spanning pop, hip-hop, rock, electronic, and everything in between. If you make music across multiple genres, that breadth can be useful. But if you make electronic music specifically, that breadth works against you — you spend time filtering out irrelevant labels and end up submitting to the same handful of relevant ones anyway.
TogetherWeRise focuses exclusively on electronic music. Every label in the directory releases house, techno, deep house, melodic techno, drum and bass, or a related subgenre. Labels are ranked by real Beatport and Traxsource chart performance — so the ranking reflects which labels are actually charting and releasing music that performs, not which labels paid for visibility. For an electronic music producer, that focused, data-backed directory is significantly more useful than a larger generalist list.
LabelRadar provides feedback within a 14-day window. The feedback format is relatively basic — primarily a pass or decline with optional notes.
TogetherWeRise requires labels to provide structured feedback within 7 days: ratings on Production Quality, Originality, and Marketability, plus a written personal note. This means whether a label signs your track or passes, you walk away knowing exactly what they thought and why. Over multiple submissions, that structured feedback is a genuine development tool — you can see patterns in what labels flag, compare ratings across submissions, and understand exactly where your production needs work. For an emerging artist, that feedback is often worth more than the submission cost itself.
Both platforms charge approximately $2 per submission. The difference is what that $2 buys. On LabelRadar, it buys a 14-day response window with basic feedback. On TogetherWeRise, it buys a 7-day guaranteed response with structured ratings and written notes from the label — and an automatic credit refund if the label misses the deadline, no request needed. The per-submission price is comparable; the value returned per dollar is not.
LabelRadar is a demo submission platform that connects artists with record labels across all music genres. Artists pay a small fee per submission and labels have a set window to respond with feedback.
TogetherWeRise is a creator growth engine built specifically for electronic music artists. It includes a demo submission platform with guaranteed 7-day feedback, plus smart links, presave campaigns, download gates, an AI ad studio, and a label directory of 200+ electronic music labels ranked by Beatport and Traxsource chart data.
LabelRadar charges per demo submission, typically $1–2 per label. TogetherWeRise charges $2 per submission. Both platforms require payment per submission — there is no free submission tier on either platform.
TogetherWeRise is built exclusively for electronic music, with 200+ curated labels ranked by real Beatport and Traxsource chart performance. LabelRadar has a larger total label count across all genres, but if you make electronic music specifically, TogetherWeRise's focused directory is more relevant — every label you see releases in your genre.
LabelRadar has a 14-day response window. TogetherWeRise guarantees feedback within 7 days, and if a label misses the deadline, you automatically receive a credit refund — no need to request it.
The core difference is focus. LabelRadar is a generalist platform covering all music genres with a large label count. TogetherWeRise is built exclusively for electronic music, with a shorter feedback guarantee (7 vs 14 days), more detailed structured feedback (production, originality, and marketability ratings plus written notes), and additional tools like smart links, presave campaigns, and an AI ad studio.
$2 per submission. Guaranteed feedback in 7 days. Automatic refund if a label misses the deadline.