Find your platform below and paste the link. You get back every track in the set, in order, with a timestamp on each one.
Identify My Mix →A DJ set is not a song, and that is the whole problem. Shazam listens to a few seconds of ambient audio and names one track. A two-hour warehouse set contains forty of them, blended into each other, pitched up, layered, and EQ'd beyond what a single snapshot can resolve. Setlist.ID takes the opposite approach: it pulls the complete audio from the link you paste, cuts it into overlapping segments, and fingerprints every one of them against a database of more than 100 million tracks.
That pipeline does not care which platform the recording came from. A Boiler Room broadcast on YouTube, a promo mix on Hearthis, a club livestream saved to Facebook, and a thirty-second Reel all go through the same fingerprinting engine. What changes between them is the raw material: length, bitrate, how much crowd noise sits on top of the music, and whether the upload is a full set or a clip of one transition. The pages below spell out what to expect from each source before you spend a token on it.
A list of names on its own is not much use, so every track you get back carries a link to the service you already use, ready to play or buy.
Start with the platform you found it on. Each guide covers what to expect from that source, and how to get the tracks into the service you listen on.
Boiler Room broadcasts, festival streams, and label channels.
Underground promo mixes and continuous DJ sets.
Radio shows, weekly residencies, and long-form mixes.
Club night livestreams and one-off live videos.
Hip-hop, Afrobeats, and dancehall mixtapes.
Curated label films and mastered live captures.
Archival broadcasts and vintage DJ sets.
Techno and house promo mixes, uncut and unbroken.
Short DJ clips, live replays, and viral set moments.
Reels, club clips, and saved IG Live sessions.
Timeline clips and viral set highlights.
You are not locked into anything here. The tracklist is the same either way, and each track carries links to all three services, so you can play it, buy it, or just find out what it was.
Every identified track comes back with a Spotify link, so you can play it instantly, save it to your library, and build your own playlist from the set. Spotify is the easy choice if you just want to stream and rediscover the music later.
Each identified track links straight to Deezer, including its HiFi lossless catalog. It is a strong pick for listeners who want higher-quality streaming, and Deezer's catalog often covers releases that are missing elsewhere.
Each identified track links to Beatport, the DJ store, so you can buy the extended mix or a lossless WAV/AIFF and drop it straight into your own sets. This is what crate-digging DJs are after, not just a track name but a file to play.
Paste your link and get the full tracklist, start to finish.