Blog

35 Best DJ Promo Email Subject Lines: The Ultimate Guide

A close-up of a digital inbox on a smartphone showing music promo emails, with a DJ mixer in the background.

Your subject line is the whole ballgame. A DJ can't play a track they never open, and the subject line is the only thing standing between your promo and the bin. Get it right and your carefully written pitch gets read. Get it wrong and the best track of your life sits unheard in an overflowing inbox.

This article is a practical, example-heavy companion to How to Write a Music Promo Email That Gets Opened. In that guide, we cover the full email structure; here we go deep on the single most important line — with 35 subject lines you can adapt today.

Why DJ promo subject lines are different

DJs aren't scrolling for entertainment. They're scanning a crowded inbox for tools they can use in a set. That changes what works. A DJ's subconscious filter is asking three things in a fraction of a second:

  1. Is this relevant to what I play?
  2. Is this from someone who did their homework?
  3. Is this worth 30 seconds of my time right now?

The best subject lines answer "yes" before the DJ even opens the message. The worst ones scream spam, hype or laziness and get deleted on sight.

The anatomy of a subject line that gets opened

Strong DJ promo subject lines almost always share four traits:

  • Specific, not generic. "Melodic techno promo" beats "New music."
  • Relevant to them. Reference their sets, their sound, or their audience.
  • Honest. No fake "Re:", no false urgency, no bait.
  • Short. Around 6–9 words so it isn't cut off on mobile, where most DJs read their mail.

Keep the genre or energy in the line itself. A DJ who plays only house should be able to tell, from the subject alone, that your track belongs in their world.

35 DJ promo email subject lines by category

Adapt these to your track and the DJ. Replace the brackets with real details — never send a template raw.

Genre + fit (the workhorses)

These lead with genre and signal relevance. They're the safest, highest-performing style.

  1. [Genre] promo — fits your [night/show]
  2. Melodic techno for your peak-time sets
  3. Deep house promo — 122 BPM, A minor
  4. Drum & bass promo for [radio show]
  5. Afro house — made for your Sunday sets
  6. New [genre] cut, DJ-ready (WAV + MP3)
  7. Organic house promo — think [reference artist]
  8. Tech house roller for your warm-ups

Personalised / relationship-based

These reference something real about the DJ. They convert best but require you to actually do the research.

  1. Loved your [event] set — track that fits it
  2. You played [artist] — I think you'll like this
  3. For your [playlist name] playlist
  4. Since you support [label], this might land
  5. Made this after hearing your [show] episode
  6. Fellow [city] artist — [genre] promo

Exclusive / early access

DJs value getting music first. These lean on exclusivity — only use them if it's true.

  1. Exclusive promo before [release date]
  2. Early promo — out [date], yours first
  3. Unreleased [genre] — private preview
  4. Promo before it's public: [track name]
  5. First look: [genre] track, out next month

Straightforward and honest

When in doubt, plain and clear beats clever. These respect the DJ's time.

  1. Promo: [Artist] – [Track] ([genre])
  2. [Genre] promo for your consideration
  3. New promo — [BPM] BPM [genre], free download
  4. Track submission — [genre], DJ-friendly
  5. [Artist] – [Track] | promo + download

Curiosity (use sparingly)

Curiosity can lift opens but backfires if the email doesn't deliver. Keep it honest.

  1. The [genre] track your sets are missing
  2. This one's built for the 2am slot
  3. Might be your next set opener
  4. A [genre] weapon for your crates
  5. Wrote this with your dancefloor in mind

Radio / show specific

For DJs who host shows or radio slots, name the show.

  1. Submission for [show name] — [genre]
  2. [Genre] track for your radio rotation
  3. For [show]: [BPM] BPM, clean intro/outro
  4. Mixable [genre] cut for [station]
  5. Radio-ready promo — [genre], [duration]
  6. [Show] listener + artist — new [genre] promo

Subject line mistakes that get you deleted

Even a great track dies behind these. Avoid them completely:

Don'tWhy it fails
🔥🔥 CHECK THIS OUT 🔥🔥Emoji spam screams amateur
Re: our conversationFake threads destroy trust instantly
PLEASE PLAY MY TRACK!!!Desperation and ALL CAPS repel DJs
Hey / Hi / New musicZero information, zero relevance
The best track you'll hear all yearOver-promising invites harsh judgement
Free download!!! aloneReads as spam, filtered before it's seen

Also avoid ALL CAPS, more than one exclamation mark, misleading urgency, and anything that could apply to any track by any artist.

How to personalise at scale without going generic

The tension every promoting artist feels: personalised emails work best, but personalising 80 of them is exhausting. Two things solve it.

First, build genuinely relevant lists so relevance is baked in before you write a word. If every DJ on your list truly plays your style, even a lightly personalised line lands. A vetted, filterable network like The Musical Road means you're pitching people who already fit — see our pricing for what's included.

Second, use a smart starting draft. The free DJ Promo Email Generator creates a personalised subject line and email body from your track details in seconds, so you're editing instead of staring at a blank screen. Generate, then add the one real, specific detail that only applies to that DJ.

Timing matters as much as wording

The best subject line still fails if it lands at the wrong moment. Working DJs gig on weekends and read email mid-week. Send on Tuesday to Thursday mornings, and reach out 2–3 weeks before release so DJs have time to add and road-test the track. For the full outreach playbook, see How to Promote Your Music to DJs.

How to adapt these templates to your track

Templates are a starting point, never a finished product. Turn any line above into a specific, sendable subject in three quick steps:

  1. Drop in your real details. Replace every bracket with the actual genre, BPM, key, show name or reference artist. "[Genre] promo — fits your [night]" becomes "Afro house promo — fits your Sunday sessions."
  2. Add one true relevance hook. The strongest subject lines reference something real about the DJ. If you can't name a set, a supported track or a shared scene, do the research first — that hook is where opens come from.
  3. Read it as the DJ. Would you open this in a crowded inbox on your phone? If it's generic, vague or hypey, sharpen it until a busy DJ can tell in one glance that it's relevant and honest.

Matching the subject line to the DJ's context

The same track deserves different subject lines depending on who you're pitching. A radio host, a club resident and a playlist-running DJ scan for different things:

DJ typeLead withExample angle
Club residentSet fit and energy"Peak-time roller for your Friday sets"
Radio show hostShow name + format"Submission for [show] — clean intro/outro"
Playlist curatorPlaylist fit"For your [playlist] — [genre], [BPM] BPM"
Tastemaker / bloggerStory or angle"New [genre] cut with a story behind it"

Tailoring the angle to the context signals you actually understand what that person does — which is exactly the respect that earns a reply.

FAQ

What is the best length for a DJ promo subject line?
Aim for 6–9 words. Most DJs check emails on their phones between gigs or while travelling; keeping it short ensures the most important information, like genre or BPM, isn't cut off.
Should I use emojis in my music promo emails?
Generally, no. While one emoji might occasionally work, multiple fire or rocket emojis often trigger spam filters and look unprofessional to established DJs and radio presenters.