Beatport Release Description Generator for Progressive House Producers
Beatport descriptions are the first thing a curator, a DJ, or another producer reads when they land on your release page. For progressive house, the genre's vocabulary is famously easy to fake — and the scene can smell a press-release-style description in one sentence. Predrop's progressive house voice writes descriptions that sound like they came from inside the scene, not outside it.
Why this matters
A Beatport description for progressive house lives or dies on whether it sounds like a real progressive house writer. The scene has its own vocabulary, its own reference points (Eric Prydz, Sasha & Digweed, Anjunadeep, Bedrock), and equally specific things it doesn't say. Generic AI tools collapse the difference between subgenres, defaulting to interchangeable language that lands flat for any of them. Predrop's progressive house voice is built around the actual scene — adapting to where the track sits inside it (subgenre lane, mood, tempo) and writing 130–180 words that read as observation rather than promotion.
Sample output
High Lane lives in the anticipation. Built around a single lead synth and the eight bars of tension that precede it, the track makes a discipline out of restraint — everything before that moment exists to make the moment matter. At 126 BPM in D minor, the arrangement moves with the kind of quiet insistence that defines the better end of progressive house right now. The low end stays purposeful, the pad work keeps the atmosphere pressurized without releasing it, and the lead synth, when it finally surfaces, lands with the weight that only a properly earned entrance can carry. There is no shortcut taken to get there. The build does not announce itself; it accumulates. For selectors who still believe a floor can be held through tension rather than spectacle, High Lane is the kind of track that justifies the long mix. It fits naturally alongside the current Bedrock and Last Night On Earth catalog — patient, driving, and uninterested in rushing anything.
About Progressive House
Progressive house is the long-arrangement, slow-burn, melodic subgenre — Eric Prydz / Pryda, Sasha and John Digweed (history), Anjunadeep, Bedrock. Distinguishes from trance (less vocal-driven, less mainstage) and from deep house (more melodic, faster pacing, bigger leads). Predrop's prog house voice carries those reference points naturally without name-dropping.
Generate your progressive house Beatport description for $9. Plus seven other pieces of release copy in the same voice.
Generate for $9No account, no subscription. Results in your inbox in under a minute.