After months of building, rebuilding, redesigning, deleting things, rethinking things, and obsessing over details nobody will probably ever notice… band.place is finally live.
Not “finished”. Probably never finished. But live.
Right now, registration is invitation-only while we continue shaping the platform alongside the first artists using it. If you want early access, you can join the waitlist through the form on the site. We’ll be sending invitations in waves as we expand access.
band.place exists because building a website as an artist still feels weirdly broken.
Most platforms either feel too generic, too corporate, too bloated, or too focused on turning musicians into web designers. On the other side, running your own WordPress setup usually turns into plugin maintenance, broken themes, hosting problems, SEO headaches, and a dashboard that feels more like office software than something made for artists.
We wanted something different.
A platform built specifically for bands, solo artists, producers, labels, and music projects. Something that understands what a discography is. Something that knows artists need press kits, platform links, tour dates, videos, mailing lists, shops, custom domains, and all the other pieces that somehow end up scattered across five different services.
band.place brings all of that together into one place.
You can connect platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, Bandcamp, YouTube Music, TIDAL, and YouTube, and automatically sync your releases and videos directly into your website. Your discography stays updated without manually rebuilding pages every time a new release drops.
There’s a built-in press kit system for sharing bios, photos, stage plots, tech riders, and contact information with promoters, journalists, and festivals. You can password protect it if needed.
There’s a native newsletter system because social media algorithms are unreliable and your audience shouldn’t belong to a platform you don’t control.
There’s a shop system built around Stripe Connect so artists can sell directly to fans without us sitting in the middle of their money flow.
There’s support for custom domains, managed hosting, automatic SSL, analytics integrations, theme switching, and all the annoying infrastructure stuff artists shouldn’t have to think about.
And honestly, one of the biggest goals was this:
Your website shouldn’t feel like work.
It should feel like part of your project.
We also cared a lot about the visual side of this. band.place themes are built specifically for music projects, not adapted from restaurant templates or startup landing pages. Some are minimal. Some are cinematic. Some are weird. More are coming.
This launch is just the beginning.
There are still features we want to build, themes we want to create, integrations we want to support, and a lot of polish ahead of us. But it felt important to finally put this out into the world and start building it together with real artists.
If you want to be part of the early access phase, head over to band.place and join the waitlist.
We’ll see you soon 🚀