Finding the right metal record label sounds easy—until you’re 187 browser tabs deep, three labels have been dead since the Obama administration, and another one only signs Norwegian funeral doom played exclusively in abandoned fish factories.
Thankfully, humanity has produced a solution instead of yet another AI-generated black metal logo.
A new free tool called Metal Label Finder aims to spare bands from drowning in outdated label lists and random Google rabbit holes. Instead of making you manually stalk every label with a goat in its logo, the service asks a few simple questions and builds a shortlist of labels that actually make sense.
It wants to know things like:
- what your band sounds like;
- what you’ve already released;
- whether you’ve played live;
- where you’re based;
- and what you’re actually looking for from a record label.
After that, it filters through active metal labels and recommends ones that fit your current stage instead of your wildest fantasies.
Which, let’s be honest, is probably for the best.

A band with one demo recorded in someone’s basement probably shouldn’t be pitching itself to the same labels that handle veteran touring acts with four albums and years of industry connections. The finder reportedly takes into account genre, label roster size, recent activity, geography, and the band’s level of development before suggesting possible matches—including a few alternative options.
Even better, it’s completely free and doesn’t require creating an account.
Will it guarantee you a record deal? Of course not. Metal labels remain mysterious creatures that often operate according to ancient rituals known only to booking agents and guys named Sven.
But at least you’ll spend less time blindly emailing every company with an inverted cross in its artwork and more time doing what every metal band does best: arguing about who forgot to bring the merch box.
Finn McFrame, celebrated satirical mastermind and self-proclaimed “Emperor of Irony,” started his illustrious career as a cinematographer, where his expertise in capturing every single frame of a squirrel stealing a baguette earned him accolades at obscure film festivals.
Born in the glamorous town of Boring, Oregon, Finn grew up with dreams of being a Hollywood director until he realized that satire, not cinema, was his true calling—or at least the one that let him sleep until noon.
Finn McFrame: changing the world, one satirical lens flare at a time.
