If you’ve been rapping for a while, you probably have a familiar graveyard: dozens of songs written to random YouTube beats that you will never officially release. Maybe the producer doesn’t respond. Maybe the license doesn’t allow streaming. Maybe the audio was ripped and you don’t even know who made the beat. The verses might be some of your best work, but they’re stuck on top of a beat you aren’t sure you’re allowed to use.
This is demotivating and, over time, it kills momentum. The problem isn’t that you’re writing too much. The problem is that you’re writing on the wrong beats. In this guide, you’ll learn how to build a simple system so you only invest real energy into beats you can actually release. The goal is straightforward: less wasted writing, more finished songs you can put on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and everywhere else without stress.
Writing is emotional work. When you pour real life, pain, confidence, dreams or anger into a verse, you’re giving away something you can’t fully get back. Doing that on top of a beat you can’t use is like building a house on land you don’t own. It might look good in the moment, but you can’t live in it or sell it later.
The real cost isn’t just the time you spent. It is the lost potential of those lyrics. That verse could have been the core of a single, an EP track, or a fan favorite you perform on stage. Instead, it becomes a “demo you love but can’t drop”. When this happens over and over, you start doubting yourself, when in reality you should be doubting your process.
The solution is not to write less. The solution is to create a filter so that when you sit down to write seriously, you are already on a beat that is safe, licensed and realistic to release.
One of the simplest ways to stop wasting verses is to divide your beats into two clear categories in your mind and in your folders.
The first category is practice and brainstorming. These are beats you allow yourself to freestyle on, to experiment with flow, to test out topics and patterns. You can use random instrumentals for this stage. Nothing here is sacred. You might take phrases and ideas into a finished song later, but you don’t emotionally marry yourself to these early experiments.
The second category is release-ready beats. These are the only instrumentals you allow yourself to fully commit to: writing complete songs, refining concepts, recording serious takes and planning a release. Before a beat enters this category, you already know who owns it, where to get it, and what type of license is available. Emotionally, you treat this group differently. When you open a folder of release beats, your brain should know: anything I write here has the potential to end up on streaming platforms.
Using a catalog like the one at Beats & Instrumentals on Tellingbeatzz makes this second category much easier to build, because you’re browsing beats that already come with clear terms and a direct path to licensing.
Before you decide, “I’m going to fully write this song,” run the beat through three quick questions. Answer them honestly, and if any of them are a clear “no,” treat the beat as a practice tool, not a release foundation.
The first question is: do I know where this beat actually comes from? If all you have is a low-quality YouTube rip with no clear link to the producer’s page or store, that’s already a red flag. The second question is: can I find clear licensing information for this beat? A serious producer will either have a website, a beat store or at least a pinned post explaining how to license their work. If you can’t find any information at all, you’re walking blind. The third question is: does the license match my plan? If you want to upload the track to Spotify, shoot a music video, or monetize the song, you need a license that explicitly allows for that.
If the beat passes all three questions, it has earned a spot in your “release beats” folder. If not, you can still use it to practice, but you shouldn’t pour your best, most personal verses into it. Save those for instrumentals that can carry your music into the world.
A lot of confusion comes from not understanding what licensing options really mean. You don’t have to become a lawyer, but you should get comfortable with the basics: what non-profit use is, what a non-exclusive lease is, and what kind of limitations are usually attached to each tier. Some licenses might allow uploading to streaming platforms up to a certain number of plays. Others might forbid monetized YouTube videos or restrict sync placements.
A good starting point is to study a clear breakdown of common beat licensing terms so you get used to the language. If you’re working with beats from Tellingbeatzz, you can use this overview as a reference: Beat Licensing Explained. Once you understand the structure, scanning a license page becomes much easier. You quickly see whether a particular license tier lets you do what you want, or whether you need to upgrade to a higher one to release music without worrying.
Before you write seriously, take one or two minutes to check: is this beat on a store I can access, does it have a license that fits my plans, and can I afford that license either now or in the near future? If the answer is yes, you’re safe to invest your verses. If the answer is no, treat the beat as a sketchpad and nothing more.
Free beats are not automatically bad. In fact, they can be extremely useful in specific situations. If you’re just starting out, free instrumentals are a great way to practice writing, develop your flow and learn how to ride different kinds of drums without spending money on every single experiment. They also help you figure out what kind of moods, tempos and styles you naturally gravitate to.
The problem begins when artists treat free beats as the foundation for serious releases without checking the terms. Some producers allow non-profit use only, some want you to tag them in every upload, others require you to eventually buy a license if the song does well. If you ignore those rules, you’re building songs on shaky ground. A beat might be “free to use” but not truly free to monetize.
A smart approach is to use free beats for training and testing, and move to properly licensed beats as soon as you feel a song is strong enough to release. If you’re grabbing instrumentals from a source like Tellingbeatzz, you can also look for clearly defined free options and then step up to paid licenses once you’re ready to release. The key is clarity: you should always know what you’re allowed to do before you go public with a track.
One of the most powerful habits you can build is to separate “beat hunting” from “songwriting sessions.” Most artists mix them together: they spend half the night searching for beats, finally find something, and then feel pressured to write immediately because they’ve already sunk so much time into digging. This almost guarantees that you’ll end up writing on beats without checking anything.
Instead, schedule dedicated time where you do nothing but curate beats for your release folder. During those sessions, you focus on finding instrumentals from credible producers, ideally on proper beat platforms where you can see licensing options in advance. You may browse by mood, genre or artist style, until you’ve selected a handful of beats you love and know you can license when the time comes. These beats go into a clearly labeled folder that your future self can open without hesitation.
When you later sit down to write, you don’t touch YouTube search. You open your release folder. Every beat in there has already passed your basic checks. You know who made it, where to get it and, at least in rough terms, what the license will allow. That alone will save dozens of verses from ending up trapped on unusable instrumentals. A curated, high-quality catalog like Beats & Instrumentals on Tellingbeatzz can be the backbone of this folder, because you’re pulling from a source that was created with licensing and releases in mind.
Once you stop wasting verses on beats you can’t release, something interesting happens: your finished songs start to add up. Instead of having ten demos over random beats you’ll never clear, you have ten songs over beats you can actually license, register and promote. That’s the beginning of a real catalog.
At that point, you can start grouping your release-ready tracks into singles, EPs and themed projects. You might notice that several of your strongest songs all sit in a similar emotional lane, for example darker, more introspective material, or more confident and motivational tracks. You can then plan around that, pairing the right cover art, content strategy and rollout with the beats and songs that already exist. Because the licensing is clear, you don’t have to pause your momentum to chase paperwork or worry about takedowns every time something starts moving.
This is how independent artists quietly build careers: not by writing more than everyone else, but by making sure that the songs they do write are built on beats they’re allowed to carry forward.
If you want to stop wasting verses, you need reliable sources of beats that come with a clear path to licensing. Working directly with producers who have professional beat stores is the easiest shortcut. On Tellingbeatzz, for example, you can browse a wide range of instrumentals in different moods, genres and artist styles, knowing that behind every beat there is a clear licensing structure and a way to buy the rights you need.
Instead of getting emotionally attached to random, anonymous type beats, shift your focus to beats from places where “I love this instrumental” can naturally turn into “I can license this and put it on my album.” Start by building a small release folder of just five to ten beats you trust. Then make yourself a promise: your best verses only go on instrumentals from that folder.
If you hold that boundary, your writing sessions may feel a bit slower at first, but the songs you finish will finally have somewhere to live. And that’s the whole point of this shift: not to write less, but to make sure that when the right verse comes out of you, it lands on a beat you can actually release to the world.
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