In a music marketing world saturated with formulaic promotion, a new agency is rapidly changing the playbook and attracting major label attention in the process.
Founded by Faisal “Vice” Wardak, Purgion has positioned itself at the center of a shift in how music is marketed in the digital age. Over the past 18 months, the agency has played a behind-the-scenes role in a string of high-profile album rollouts, offering artists a distinct alternative to legacy PR and promotional firms.
Clients include a mix of established stars and emerging names. Among them Logic, Roy Woods, Jennifer Lopez, French Montana, Lil Dicky, BIA, Wiz Khalifa, and Lil Mosey. While their roster is noteworthy, insiders say it’s Purgion’s unconventional approach, grounded in algorithm testing, influencer engagement, and platform-native content strategies that’s drawing the most attention.
“Everyone does the same rollouts expecting different results,” said Wardak in a recent interview. “We build campaigns around real personalities, not just how they should manufacture themselves.”
That focus on organic digital behavior has led Purgion to embrace tactics typically associated with underground artists and content creators: audio seeding through TikTok influencers, unannounced campaign drops, and leveraging platform quirks to spark algorithmic momentum. Industry executives have quietly taken notice.
New Tactics for a Changing Landscape
With traditional rollout cycles becoming less effective in an oversaturated market, Purgion’s data-driven but adaptable style has proven timely. Their work aimed to reintroduce artists to a younger streaming audience through comedic content and targeted placement.
Their recent involvement in Lil Mosey’s presence also marked a shift, blending mainstream celebrity with Gen Z digital engagement strategies.
“It’s a different kind of creative team,” said one label executive familiar with the agency’s work. “They think like content creators, not marketers. That’s why they win on platforms.”
A Team Built for the Digital Era
The agency’s internal structure reflects this evolution. Comprised largely of creatives and strategists in their 20s, Purgion operates more like a startup than a traditional media firm. That youth-driven energy, paired with a willingness to test, fail, and recalibrate has created what some insiders are calling one of the more agile firms in the music ecosystem.
Despite their age, Purgion’s team has reportedly consulted on rollouts for some of the most streamed projects of the year. Their reputation has been built not through industry press or award wins, but through measurable digital impact, viral audio trends, visible playlist growth, and fan-driven online engagement.
Shaping the Future of Rollouts
Whether or not Purgion will maintain its current trajectory remains to be seen. But as of mid-2025, the agency represents a growing demand for marketing approaches that align more closely with platform dynamics than legacy media placements.
Their recent campaigns for rising artists suggest the agency is just as focused on building new stars as it is on supporting marquee names. The ability to navigate both lanes – legacy and up-and-coming could prove critical as labels continue to chase digital relevance.
As more artists and managers seek out flexible, creator-first promotional support, firms like Purgion could become increasingly central to the way records are launched, promoted, and sustained in today’s music landscape.