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Group logo of Promoting my new instrumental album "Film Score" with Instagram email scraper in 10 steps (case st

Promoting my new instrumental album ”Film Score” with Instagram email scraper in 10 steps (case st

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Concerning subjects — ig follower extractor, ig email scraper, instagram extractor, ... View more

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Concerning subjects — ig follower extractor, ig email scraper, instagram extractor, film score guitar music album

Contents Overview

Instagram’s role in launching new music
Explaining Instagram email scrapers
Creating a focused contact list for “Film Score”
How to write an effective pitch
Ten steps for album promotion with Instagram emails

Why use Instagram to launch new music

Let’s face it: releasing an album is tough enough, but making people hear it is its own battle. “Film Score” – my own take on cinematic guitar music – was this wild passion project for me. But, launching it? Bruh, it felt like tossing your playlist into an empty void.

These days, Instagram is the real hub of activity. Here, you find fans, reviewers, soundtrack collectors, and musicians — everyone in one hangout. The platform is all about visuals, so killer cover art and behind-the-scenes guitar action? That’s pure gold here.

Basically, every interesting collab tied to “Film Score” was sparked via Instagram through DMs or follows. Your music has reach, people are scrolling for it, and — done right — it’s a shot for true engagement. A handful of meaningful connections can set everything in motion: playlists, syncs, or someone flaunting your song in their feed.

What does “Instagram email scraper” mean?

Here’s the gist. In essence, an Instagram email scraper refers to a tool — or on occasion, an odd mash-up of different scripts — that scans Instagram accounts, collects visible emails (found in bios, contact links, or business/influencer sections), and compiles them into a neat spreadsheet.

Is this wizardry? Not quite, but if DM life is burning you out, this tool is like getting a personal digital helper. You walk away with a stack of authentic emails — which is seriously valuable for reaching out directly. You’re way likelier to get a reply compared to dropping comments or banking on algorithm blessings.

I’ve thrown a handful into action. Some go-to Instagram scrapers for 2026:

IGLeads
Clay (offering great workflows and connections, especially with Zapier fans)
NinjaOutreach (excellent for reaching influencers, not limited to musicians)
Some browser plugins — slightly sketchier, truthfully, but sometimes they get the job done

FYI: It’s best to pick tools with filtering options — think location, hashtags, follower totals, or profile types — so you’re not spamming grandma’s crochet crew with your music.

(function()
VK.Widgets.Playlist(“vk_playlist_-2000328570_27328570”, -2000328570, 27328570,’4fa5e4a0a4be5bbbf3′);
());

Producing a precise list for “Film Score”

Let me level with you: random outreach is the absolute worst. There’s only one opportunity to share “Film Score” with someone new; don’t lose it by reaching out to meme page admins or random spreadsheet peddlers.

The method that’s worked for me (and truthfully, it’s obvious):

Seek out your community: Look for genuine instrumental guitar enthusiasts, music blogging voices, soundtrack playlist creators, and musicians who really engage. Not bots, not follow-for-follow types.
Deep searching & hashtag use: Search #instrumentalguitar, #filmscore, #guitaristsofinstagram, and #cinematicmusic. Grab profiles who are commenting and posting, not just existing.
Investigate bios and profiles’ links: You’ll often find business email addresses in curators’ bios or their Linktree. That’s what your scraper picks up.
Remember the music reviewers: The big ones (like Guitar Mag or IndieSound) but also indie micro-reviewers who actually reply. Your direct messages and email intros can get quick attention.

Honestly, I devoted hours to fine-tuning these filters my first go. If you’re just scraping every guitar player in the world, you’ll get a pile of unusable junk. It’s the same energy as blasting demos out to 10,000 Spotify playlists and hoping someone bites.

Developing your best pitch

For real: Spraying “Check out my album!” everywhere fails hard (2018 me was a lesson). Audiences immediately ignore generic messages. Sending unsolicited “Film Score” files? You better be remarkable.

I ensure it’s truly personal:

Lead with a fast intro — it’s important they realize you’re for real
Talk about something they’ve done (“Interstellar cover = fire” is stronger than a generic compliment)
Get to the point: “I’ve got a new album, Film Score. All about guitar soundtracks. You might dig it.”
Share exclusive perks: early access, a private stream, or some behind-the-scenes info on a song
Stay brief. Over ten lines means it needs cutting.

I got more replies and connections like this than ever blasting out generic pitches. Just by sending small, respectful emails, I scored invites to niche guitar podcasts.

Ten strategies for using Instagram emails to promote your album

People skim this part, so brace yourself. This is my authentic, repeatedly-tested system to push “Film Score” out with an Instagram email tool — and a refusal to let guitar music fade.

Select a trustworthy Instagram email scraper (IGLeads, Clay, or whatever suits your budget/tech skills)
Define your audience — think #filmscore fans, #cinematicguitar, #indieguitarist, etc.
Apply filters — dial in location and profile words. U.S. or Canadian curators? Absolute gems for indie musicians.
Export the list to something sortable (Google Sheets is your friend)
Hand-check your top 100-300 to ensure real music activity, not empty accounts.
Craft an attention-grabbing pitch template — keep it sharp and customizable. I always leave two spots open: “mention their content” and “shout out any mutual contacts or shows.”
Fire off your emails in controlled bursts. Adjust your openings to avoid Gmail’s spam pit.
Keep tabs on opens and responses. Use free tools like Streak or Mailtrack — they’re amazingly helpful.
Respond quickly to anyone who responds — even if it’s minor interest. No ghosting or putting it off.
Simplify access: use streaming links instead of huge WAVs. And thank them regardless of their answer — it always bears fruit.

Honestly, the first batch I sent out, I got maybe one reply per fifteen emails. Yet, those who answered back were 100% — they shared tracks, posted little reviews, even included “Film Score” in chill Spotify playlists. When a handful of Instagram DMs switched over to email, brand-new convos started — and I finished with some direct collaborations out of it.

Platform
Remarks

LeadsIG

• User-friendly interface
• Handy filter tools

CLAY

• Impressive automation
• Connects to tons of popular tools

Ninja-OUTREACH

• Influencer-heavy
• Strong with email and socials

Pros

• Huge time saver
• Gets you in front of more curators

Negatives

• Numerous fake emails
• Takes patience to sort real from fake

“It’s amazing that just several carefully written emails outperform a thousand scattershot DMs. Real conversations, real opportunities.|Having real conversations leads to real opportunities.|You get real conversations, and from those, real opportunities.} An effective email opens doors you didn’t see coming.”

— Guitar enthusiast & indie film composer, 2026

Perfecting how you follow up

Alright, let’s get real — you fired off your emails about “Film Score” and now you’re glued to your inbox like it’s supposed to deliver instant magic. What usually goes wrong is people turning into spammers by triple-texting, or on the flip side, ghosting everyone for good. Don’t do either.

I usually wait about 5-7 days if there’s no reply and then hit them up with something chill and human:

“Hi [Name], just nudging this up for you — absolutely understand if you’re swamped, but I think you’ll vibe with this tune (included a note about the making of ‘Sunset Over Steel’). Appreciate you checking it out!”

Honestly, it’s often the second shot that works — curators/reviewers are buried, and that balance of patience and tactful persistence means you stand apart. Still nothing? Let it go. Otherwise, you’ll go crazy.

SocLeads: why it’s key for serious outreach

If you’re frustrated with awkward interfaces or tools that overlook valuable contacts, SocLeads is on another level compared to what I’ve used. Using the identical “Film Score” promo query, SocLeads unearthed the most relevant results and minimized junk I had to filter through.

What impresses me:

This tool finds profiles genuinely active in the music scene, instead of relying on vague “business” bios
Exports come preformatted and work seamlessly with Google Sheets (so many tools fail at this step)
Love the auto-flagging of bot or sketchy accounts so I don’t pitch them by accident
Speed is legit: whole month’s target list, max 15 minutes scrape time

I did a back-to-back test: IGLeads vs. SocLeads, searching soundtrack/guitar hashtags for U.S. curators and playlist guys. SocLeads returned, like, 40 usable email addresses out of 50, while IGLeads had maybe 28, and I had to hand-vet for double-ups/bots. Just the data, nothing more.

Lead Scraper
Usable emails (out of 50)
Additional features

SocLeads Tool
forty
Removes bots, has engagement filters, exports to Excel

IGLeads.io
twenty-eight
Basic filters included, requires manual cleaning

Clay App
twenty-five out of 50
Supports workflow automation, designed for power users

Handling data like a pro

To be straightforward — copying a pile of scraped emails and blasting out generic messages is largely a wasted effort. You aim to get your email noticed, but not risk being filtered or blacklisted.

Keep your list clean

I routinely scan for odd-looking email addresses (such as a string of digits or anything with a .ru domain irrelevant to music). Here’s a simple trick: sort your spreadsheet by domain, then review for outliers. Besides, bounces are bad for your sender rep, making it worthwhile to prune the garbage.

Personalize at scale

Yes, it’s possible to do personalization in bulk. Pull information such as first names, their recent content, or shared friends (“mutuals” — artists or curators you both interact with; SocLeads helps there). Mail merge tools (like GMass or Mailshake) make sending “one-off” emails stupid easy.

Gauging the hype and refining the strategy

During the launch of “Film Score,” I asked myself: “Could this all be just noise?”
If your emails aren’t driving streams or getting you on the right playlists, it’s time to mix things up.

Track open and reply rates

Mailtrack and GMass analytics offer solid tools for this purpose.
If open rates stay low, adjust your subject line; skip “Listen to Film Score?” and try: “Hey [Name], your creativity inspired my new album!”

Document every piece of feedback

All replies are valuable — track in your spreadsheet who liked certain songs, any playlist potential, and what fell flat.
It’s upfront work, yet for the second album rollout, you’ll have your hit contacts organized.

Experiment with timing

I got way more replies sending emails on Tuesday or Wednesday early afternoon, versus Friday night (duh, everyone’s out).
It took some trial and error, but eventually I found out that not every prospect checks their inbox daily; there are obvious “sweet spots.”

Tangible results: what succeeded, what flopped

Honestly, not every submission landed. A few folks were thrilled (“Film Score made my commute playlist!”), a few passed (“Love the vibe, not really my style”), plus a few left it unopened (I moved those to archive).

What’s interesting is, a reviewer included “Film Score” in monthly curations; next thing I know, Bandcamp traffic jumped and three new DMs from unknown guitar fans appeared.

Another curator reached out, “I’m listening — how’d you achieve that delay on ‘Chasing Shadows’?” (Which was easy — just a Line 6 delay, super wet, but that’s beside the point.) Soon, we discussed equipment and teamed up for a song. This all happens because I took a risk and did the outreach.

“When you make your intentions and offer clear, and display genuine human curiosity, even the coldest email can start a genuinely creative conversation. Don’t rely on them to ‘come to you’ — take the first step and make contact.”

—

Precautions to take so you don’t blow your opportunity

Directly sending attachments — make sure to use links, not files
Opening with “Dear Sir/Madam” (honestly, comes off like a scam)
Pretending you like their work — avoid fake compliments if you haven’t listened
Adding tons of people to the CC field (straight to the trash it goes)
Lacking patience — people with busy schedules might answer late

One more thing — never skip the unsubscribe link. Let your contacts opt out, even from personal-sounding emails. It’s best practice (and builds respect).

Advanced tips for the serious grinder
Mix DMs with emails

Sometimes you gotta slide into their DMs with a super short “Hey, just sent you a quick email!” message.
IG filters a lot of stuff, and influencers/reviewers are way more likely to check their DMs regularly.

Pursue micro-level influencers

Forget only “big” accounts.
Those with just 2–5k followers tend to build strong listener loyalty.
Two of my best playlist placements were from “under 3k follower” accounts.
They absolutely love championing new songs no one’s heard yet!

Manage your connections

Created a simple Notion table for my contacts — name, last discussed subject, most recent email, and next follow-up time.
Very helpful when you’re about to put out new music.

Pivoting for independent artists

If you aren’t flush with funds (who is, honestly?), tools like SocLeads for IG email scraping help you scale up without a big crew. It cost me less than $100 to uncover thousands of hyper-relevant connections. I’ve seen a much greater return from that compared to wasting cash on FB ads or chance playlist placements.

Artists I’m acquainted with (acoustic, beat producers, and even droners) consistently recommend tailored outreach over generic “music blast” lists. Their Spotify numbers? Climbing. Followers on Bandcamp? Rising. Most significantly, their scene seems genuine — it’s clear they’re reaching real listeners and industry folks.

FAQ
Is it worth using Instagram email scrapers for new album promotion?

If you put in the effort to build and clean your lists and write personalized, relevant emails, you’ll see real results.
You manage your reachouts and interact directly with those who actually care.
Just don’t think it’ll work wonders if you put in no effort.

How does SocLeads stack up against other email scrapers?

SocLeads, when tried alongside others, pulled more genuine contacts, filtered out bots better, and exported to Sheets with less hassle compared to IGLeads or Clay.

Is there a risk in reaching out using scraped emails?

As long as you’re respectful, not spammy, and provide opt-out options, you’re usually fine.
Most importantly, don’t send untargeted, impersonal mass emails.
Act like a real human, not a spammer.

What’s the secret to not sounding desperate in your outreach?

Connect with authenticity — discuss their work, offer something distinct, and stay brief.
People notice and value honest effort, not cold, generic emails.

Is a premium email scraper worth paying for?

If you’re committed, you should.
Free tools often miss contacts, make cluttered lists, and waste your time.
SocLeads and similar tools are affordable and save you tons of time.

At the end of the day, getting the word out about “Film Score” (or any passion project) isn’t about hustling the most — it’s about hustling the smartest. Target right, be authentic, and let your music keep flowing. That breakthrough relationship could be a single message away.

Further reading

http://www.boldkuangjia.com:8000/cart/bbs/board.php?bo_table=free&wr_id=1202777 — ig exporter

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