‘King’ or ‘Queen’ sound like good titles to me 👑
Because of how they want content displayed on their services, some of our partner stores have specific rules about what can and can’t go into track or album titles. There aren’t many, and most of the things that aren’t allowed don’t come up very often, but it’s worth being aware of them.
Please ensure that your track and release titles on releases uploaded through RouteNote doesn’t contain the following:
- Information
Your titles can’t contain any information that should belong in your title version. This includes examples such as ‘remastered’, ‘radio edit’, or ‘extended mix’. - Single/original mix
Titles can’t describe the release as a single or original mix. Again, this is a specific rule for some stores. - Distribution companies/stores
You can’t mention distribution companies or platforms (e.g. RouteNote, Spotify, YouTube, etc.) in your titles. - Numerical dates or timestamps
Titles can’t contain numerical dates or timestamps. For example, your title cannot be – 07/12/94 or 07/12 or 13:48. However, non-numerical dates are fine; e.g. July 7th 1990. - Generic titles
Titles can’t be too generic (please see our generic names and titles style guide article for more about this). - Contact information
Titles can’t any contact information (please see our contact information style guide article for more about this). - Special characters
Titles can’t use characters that are either not part of a language or are non-standard punctuation (please see our unrecognised characters style guide article for more about this).
Please note! If your release is a single, your album title must match your track title! And your title versions at track level must match your album version!
Look out for this message:
If you have any further queries, feel free to get in touch with us!
See also:
When is a title too generic?
What is not accepted when formatting my artist name?
What shouldn’t I include in my track/release ‘title version’?