Unified release and commerce flow
Structured the music store around preview-first release cards and direct purchase paths so tracks can be discovered and supported without leaving the brand world.

Colbo-Tekk TLV
A dark, high-energy platform for a Tel Aviv label and collective, bringing releases, events, radio, merch, and community touchpoints into one branded system.
Project Overview
Colbo-Tekk is not just a music page. The live site acts as a release archive, an event calendar, a radio surface, a merch storefront, and a community funnel. The work focused on making those worlds feel like one sharp experience instead of separate disconnected pages.
Colbo-Tekk TLV
Music, Events & Community
WordPress + WooCommerce
https://colbotekk.com/
What We Shipped
Structured the music store around preview-first release cards and direct purchase paths so tracks can be discovered and supported without leaving the brand world.
Brought upcoming events into a stronger visual timeline with clear venue, countdown, and booking cues for nightlife audiences.
Extended the platform beyond static pages with a dedicated radio surface that keeps the label active between events and releases.
Built a merch experience that feels native to the label instead of a bolted-on store, using the same visual language as the music and event pages.
Added forms and submission paths for helpers, bookings, and artist outreach so the platform supports participation as well as promotion.
Selected Screens
Real homepage and product/content screens captured from the live site and used here as the visual source of truth.
01
The homepage lands more like a poster for the scene than a generic website, with the label identity leading the experience.
02
The release archive behaves like a living catalog, making artwork, playback, and support actions feel immediate and connected.
03
Event pages translate nightlife energy into a clear booking surface without losing the label’s visual edge.
04
The radio layer keeps the platform alive between drops and parties by giving the collective a dedicated broadcast space.

The homepage lands more like a poster for the scene than a generic website, with the label identity leading the experience.

The release archive behaves like a living catalog, making artwork, playback, and support actions feel immediate and connected.

Event pages translate nightlife energy into a clear booking surface without losing the label’s visual edge.

The radio layer keeps the platform alive between drops and parties by giving the collective a dedicated broadcast space.
Evidence & Outcomes
Releases, tickets, radio, and merch now share one system
The live site presents multiple audience journeys under one brand instead of scattering them across separate tools or disconnected microsites.
Music discovery is preview-first
Release cards combine artwork, playback, and purchase cues so fans can browse the catalog and support tracks in the same flow.
Events are treated like headline moments
Event pages surface date, venue, countdown, and booking CTAs in a way that feels built for turnout, not buried in a post feed.
Community participation has clear entry points
Helpers, bookings, and artist-facing forms turn the site into an active collective hub rather than a one-way promotional surface.