Split Releases Explained: How to Coordinate Multi-Artist Experimental Music Projects
If you have ever tried to get two experimental musicians in the same digital room to agree on a release date, you know it is like herding cats. Feral, feedback-loving cats.
At RZRecords, we have been doing this for over twenty years. We have paired harsh noise artists with avant-jazz saxophonists, punks, metal heads IDM artists and indie shoegazers. We have pressed splits on CD-Rs that remain unsold in basements, and digital releases that connected listeners in Ukraine, the Philippines, and Serbia.
We've also tried our best with floppy disks. We failed.
A split release is the ultimate DIY handshake. It is not a compilation; it is a direct dialogue. But coordinating them requires specific strategies for legalities (or the lack thereof), money (or the lack thereof), and format. Aaaand EGO, don't forget ego.
Here is how we do it, a guide pulled directly from the RZRecords playbook.
1. The Handshake: Legal Agreements & Permissions
Let us get the boring (but necessary) part out of the way. Experimental music is often non-commercial, but music collaboration agreements are still crucial for trust.
At RZRecords, an "extremely independent" non-profit, we use "Gentleperson’s Agreements" .
The RZR Rule: Before a single note is recorded, we confirm who owns what. Because we are a collective, we usually operate on a non-exclusive license. The artist retains full rights; we simply gain permission to distribute it via our Bandcamp, distro channels and blog network.
The "Yes, And" Clause: Because our splits often involve international artists, we explicitly outline that each artist is free to re-contextualize their track. That harsh noise piece you did for a split? You can also use it for a film score later. You can re-record, re-release, re-imagine, reprint, sell it to whomever wants it, however you choose.
Sample Clearance (The Honesty Policy): If you are using your mom's answering machine messages or mini tape/dictaphone field recordings of city traffic (which we have), ensure you aren't violating anyone’s privacy. We operate on a "better to ask forgiveness" vibe, but we always ask first. Getting sued isn't fun. Having your music scrapped from platforms ain't no fun too. Respect other people's work, and make sure you respect your partner enough to not mess up the future of the release.
Takeaway: When drafting a music collaboration agreement for a split album, keep the rights non-exclusive to avoid admin headaches down the line. Doesn't have to be a contract per se, but write stuff down in an email. Make all parties feel at ease.
2. The Math: Revenue Splitting Methods
Let’s be realistic. There's a reason RZRecords describes itself as a "low-means maximum-exposure" outlet. If you are doing this for pure profit, you are probably in the wrong genre.
In most cases, the money coming in barely covers whatever admin, gear and work expenses there are.
However, money does appear sometimes. Sometimes it's YOUR money, invested in the release, and you're getting some back after spending so much of it. Someone, somewhere, bought that cassette. Here are the three methods we rotate:
1. The 50/50 Hive Mind (probably most common)
Both artists contribute equal tracks. Both promote equally. Revenue is split 50/50, regardless of which track gets more streams. This reinforces the collective mentality. We trust the community. You can sell on your platform, we sell on ours, there are many faces to this part.
2. The "Per Track" Weighted Split
If Artist A contributes 3 tracks and Artist B contributes 1 long-form drone piece (counted as 1 track), we sometimes split 75/25. This is rarer in our catalog because we value the art over the math, but it is necessary for fairness.
3. The "Bandcamp Friday" Payout
We aim to let the artists keep 100% of their digital sales, with RZR taking nothing. Our "profit" is the exposure and the collaborative network expansion. This also has another form. We don't sell the release right away or ever. It's there for streaming, but the selling is only done by the artists, and we send listeners to their profile.
Pro-Tip: Use platforms like Bandcamp, which allow for automatic percentage-based splitting directly to the artists’ accounts. No spreadsheets required. If you're releasing physical copies, go sell them at gigs. Each party sells their half.
3. The Canvas: Format Variations (A/B Side vs. Interleaved)
This is where experimental splits get fun. A split isn't just what you release; it’s how you sequence it.
The Classic A/B Side
One artist gets Side A. One artist gets Side B. This is the traditional "split" aesthetic. It is clean, respectful, and allows for two distinct listening experiences. Works great for tape releases.
The Interleaved (Playlist) Method
This is where you create a narrative. Instead of [AAAAAA] [BBBBBB], you go [A] [B] [A] [B].
We’ve used this for electroacoustic improvisation splits. It forces the listener to hear the conversation rather than the monologue. It implies the artists were in the room together, even if they recorded on separate continents.
The "Collage" Method
Occasionally, the lines blur. We’ve released splits where Artist A’s feedback loop is sampled and processed by Artist B to create the bridge. Who owns that second? (See: Legal Agreements above). We treat the final master as a joint release.
4. Case Studies: Lessons from the RZRecords Basement
Let’s look at how this works in the wild, pulled directly from the ethos of the RZRecords blog.
Case Study A: The Transatlantic Drone Split
The Artists: A contact in Canada and an artist in Israel.
The Challenge: A 7-hour time difference and zero budget for marketing.
The RZR Solution: We utilized our blog network for PR. We didn't pitch it as "Two Artists." We pitched it as "A single 40-minute meditation spanning 6,000 miles." The split release was marketed as a conceptual bridge between territories.
Revenue Split: 50/50. Both parties promoted during their respective waking hours.
Case Study B: The "No-Wave-Noise-Punk" 3-Way Split
The Artists: Acts from the US and Japan.
The Challenge: Coordinating a 3-way split where one artist recorded on a dictaphone and another in a studio. The volume variance was extreme.
The RZR Solution: We embraced the imperfection. Instead of trying to master the audio to sound uniform (which would kill the energy), we presented the format variations as part of the art. The lo-fi track was left lo-fi.
Revenue Split: We utilized the "Bandcamp Friday" method, allowing fans to tip directly to specific artists.
The Golden Rule from RZRecords:
"We have released albums recorded on answering machines and dictaphones, and albums recorded in professional studios."
The lesson? Do not let format anxiety stop you. A split release is a snapshot of where the artists are right now. ALLOW YOUTRSELF TO BE EXPERIMENTAL.
5. How to Start Your Own Split Album
Ready to ruin the world of noise and jazz? Here is your checklist:
Find Your Counterpart: Look for an artist whose sound is different, yet adjacent. A harsh noise wall artist and a dark ambient artist can create incredible tension on a split. You can also introduce your niche audience to another genre, or get two peas in one pod, it's your party.
Set the Rules: How many tracks? A specific theme (e.g., "Recordings of Metal Scraping Concrete")? YOU OWN THE NARRATIVE, GET CREATIVE.
Nail the Agreement: Even a short email confirming "Artist A owns X, Artist B owns Y, Collective owns the final master" is a contract.
Choose Your Format: A/B or Interleaved? Digital only? Limited edition CD-Rs that remain unsold for two decades? (We have those).
Promote as a Unit: Do not just tag your own followers. Tag the collective. Tag the scene. The goal of a split release is to merge audiences. GET HEARD. Have a plan, don't be afraid to repeat yourself if your first time got buried online. Share your release with the world, ask friends for help, do in online and IRL.
Final Note from the Dungeon:
At RZRecords, we aren't waiting for permission. We aren't waiting for the perfect master or the perfect contract template. We hit record, we collaborate, and we release.
A split release is the purest form of that collaboration. It is two (or more) voices saying, "We are here, we are weird, and we are in this together."
Now, go find your collaborator.
