Comic strip · label

Taglish

Boss, saan ‘yung fresh EPK ni Artist B? ‘Yung kay Artist A nasa ibang folder na naman…

English

Indie label life: ship every drop fast — pero dapat mukhang major label pa rin.

Taglish · English

Isang Tunog template, buong roster. Same brand flex, less rebuild fatigue.

Why join tunog.co

Roster presence that feels premium, not patched together

Independent labels in the Philippines (and partners abroad) use Tunog to give every act a consistent home: bios, assets, and campaign-ready pages without rebuilding the wheel each drop.

Our stance

Tunog is a Philippines-born, indie-first artist platform. We prioritize independent voices — OPM, diaspora, and emerging scenes — while staying open and global: labels, managers, agents, and listeners anywhere can plug in. We are not “import-first”; we are home-first, world-ready.

  • Repeatable layout across your roster
  • Press-ready pages labels can share with media
  • Room to grow — global collaborators welcome

Label overview

Tunog · preview

14

Active releases

8.9k

EPK views (30d)

22

Roster artists

Roster pulse

  • Luna — EPK updated
  • Kiyo — charting locally
  • VA comp — assets due Fri

Illustrative preview — numbers are decorative.

The bar: roster-grade presentation without a dev team on every drop

Independent labels win on speed and taste — but lose when every artist page looks like a different decade. Tunog gives you repeatable shells so A&R energy goes to music, not rebuilding nav bars.

You can point media, sync partners, and regional promoters to consistent Tunog hubs per act while still honoring each artist’s palette inside the same system.

Compared with generic site builders or scattered Google Docs, the difference is operational: fewer “where is the new press photo?” threads, more ship.

What you get on Tunog

Product surface varies by plan — this is the standard we design toward for your market.

Repeatable brand system per artist

Same structural quality across the roster — bios, music, visuals, and optional EPK depth — so your label reads as intentional, not improvised.

Media-ready, not just fan-ready

Press-facing routes and printable thinking mean your team spends less time reformatting the same story for every journalist.

Operational clarity at small-team scale

You are not enterprise IT — Tunog targets the workflows indie labels actually run: small teams, many acts, tight timelines.

Home-first, world-ready

Built with Philippines indie density in mind while staying credible for international partners who click your links from abroad.

How Tunog compares for labels

Others = common stacks: per-artist Squarespace/WordPress sites, link hubs, PDF press packs, and Notion pages. Tunog optimizes for music roster operations.

Roster consistency

Scattered DIY sites & generic hubs

Each artist picks their own template; drift is the default.

On Tunog

Shared Tunog music semantics (tracks, press, gigs) keep the family recognizable.

Onboarding a new signing

Scattered DIY sites & generic hubs

New microsite or new Notion tree — slow and uneven.

On Tunog

Faster path to a credible hub + EPK using the same playbook as your last drop.

What media sees in 10 seconds

Scattered DIY sites & generic hubs

Often a landing page with outbound links only.

On Tunog

Story + music + kit context in one Tunog-native flow.

Analytics that map to business questions

Scattered DIY sites & generic hubs

Per-site analytics silos; hard to compare acts apples-to-apples.

On Tunog

Hub-style analytics language (visits, plays) aligned across acts on Tunog.

Cost of ownership

Scattered DIY sites & generic hubs

Many subscriptions + contractor time to keep parity.

On Tunog

Centralized platform economics — validate against your current stack on Pricing.

We describe common categories, not a single competitor. Always verify current features and limits on Pricing before you decide.

Labels lean on Tunog when…

  • You are indie-to-mid size and care about presentation parity across multiple acts.
  • You pitch regionally and internationally and need links that still feel “major” without a dev retainer.
  • You want less operational drag between marketing, artist, and press.

When you might still mix tools

If you run complex rights portals, internal-only data rooms, or bespoke investor sites, you may still use Tunog as the public music layer while keeping confidential workflows elsewhere.