setlist.fm answers what a band played last night. For what a DJ played, the answer has to come from the audio, and that is what Setlist.ID reads.
Identify My Mix →setlist.fm is the standard for concert setlists. Fans document what a band played, song by song, and the model works because a concert is a sequence of discrete, already-known songs with clear boundaries: the singer announces it, the crowd recognizes it, someone writes it down.
DJ sets break every one of those assumptions. Thirty or forty tracks blend into each other with no boundaries and no announcements, half of them are obscure by design, and the DJ may be the only person in the building who knows what any of them are. That is why electronic events on concert-setlist sites so often sit empty or hold three tracks out of forty: memory-based documentation simply cannot capture a continuous mix.
Setlist.ID gets the setlist from the recording instead. Paste a link to the set, from YouTube, SoundCloud, Mixcloud, or any of more than a hundred platforms, and audio fingerprinting identifies every matchable track with the exact timestamp where it plays. No fan memory required, no crowd consensus, just the audio.
| setlist.fm | Setlist.ID | |
|---|---|---|
| Built for | Concerts by bands and live artists | DJ mixes, live sets, and continuous recordings |
| Where setlists come from | Fan memory and manual submissions | Audio fingerprinting of the recording |
| Continuous, blended music | No mechanism to capture it | Segmented analysis built specifically for it |
| Timestamps | Not part of the model | On every identified track |
| Cost | Free to browse and edit | Token-based, from $5.00 for 3 hours of audio |
For a rock, pop, or any band-led concert, setlist.fm is exactly the right tool and this site is not trying to replace it. Its community model fits music where songs are discrete and recognizable.
For a DJ set, a festival stream, a club night, or any continuous mix, use Setlist.ID. If a recording of the set exists at a public link, the tracklist can be generated from the audio in minutes, which is the only reliable way to document music that was never announced track by track.
No. Setlist.ID is an independent product by Skylight Studio. The names overlap because both deal in setlists, but setlist.fm documents concerts through fan submissions while Setlist.ID identifies tracks in DJ mixes through audio fingerprinting.
Pages for electronic artists exist there, but they are usually sparse or empty because the fan-memory model cannot capture a continuous mix of mostly unannounced tracks. The reliable route to a DJ tracklist is analyzing the recording itself.
It can identify commercially released studio recordings played within any audio, but live band performances differ from the studio versions fingerprints are built on, so concert recordings match far less reliably than DJ sets playing released tracks. For band concerts, setlist.fm remains the better tool.
Pricing is token-based with no subscription: 1 token per hour of processed audio, bundles from $5.00 for 3 tokens, a 0.25-token minimum for short recordings, and automatic refunds when identification fails.
Paste a link from any of 100+ platforms and get the full tracklist in minutes.