That track everyone is asking about in the comments has a name. Paste the TikTok link and find out what it is, along with everything else playing in the clip.
Identify My Mix →TikTok only tells you what a video is playing when the creator tagged a licensed sound. DJ clips almost never are: they get filmed in a club, posted as original sound, and the top comment is the same question asked fifty ways. The sound page is a dead end because there is no track behind it to click through to.
Setlist.ID does not rely on tags. It pulls the audio from the link you paste and fingerprints it against a database of more than 100 million tracks, the same pipeline used for full-length DJ sets. For a short clip that usually means one or two identified tracks, each with the exact seconds it plays and links to YouTube, Spotify, Deezer, and Beatport.
Short clips are billed at the 15-minute minimum of 0.25 tokens. If the clip turns out to be a cut from a longer set, paste the original full-length upload from YouTube or SoundCloud instead and get the whole tracklist for the same rate per hour.
Open the TikTok DJ set you want to identify and copy the URL from your browser address bar or the share menu.
Paste the TikTok URL into the input field. Sign in or create a free account to get started.
Review the video duration and token cost, then confirm. Audio fingerprinting analyzes every segment of the recording.
Every identified track comes back in play order with its timestamp, plus YouTube, Spotify, Deezer, and Beatport links. Copy it, download it as text, or export it as a playlist.
Shazam listens to a few seconds of audio and names one song, which fails on a TikTok DJ setwhere tracks are blended, layered, and EQ'd across the whole recording. Setlist.ID processes the complete audio instead, so every identifiable track is caught no matter where in the video it plays. The full comparison is on the Shazam for DJ mixes page.
The same pipeline reads links from more than 100 platforms, so if the video also exists on YouTube, SoundCloud, or anywhere else, any copy of it produces the same tracklist. And when a section stays unidentified, the timestamps show exactly where the mystery track lives, which is half the battle of hunting down an ID.
TikTok labels audio as original sound whenever a video is uploaded with its own audio track rather than a licensed sound from the library. Club clips and DJ recordings are almost always uploaded this way, so the platform itself has no idea what music is playing. Fingerprinting the audio is the way around it.
A short clip is billed at the minimum charge of 0.25 tokens, which covers up to 15 minutes of audio. Token bundles start at $5.00 for 3 tokens, so a single clip works out to well under fifty cents, and tokens are refunded automatically if identification fails.
Yes, if the replay is publicly reachable at the link you paste. Live replays run much longer than regular clips, so they come back with a fuller tracklist, billed proportionally at 1 token per hour of audio.
Average match confidence is 94 percent, and commercially released tracks identify reliably. No recognition tool can name unreleased music, so unreleased edits and dubs show up as timestamped gaps rather than guesses.
Every identified track includes its timestamp in the recording, artist and title, album and label where available, BPM and key, and links to YouTube, Spotify, Deezer, and Beatport. The full tracklist can be copied, downloaded as a text file, or exported as a playlist.
Setlist.ID uses a token system where 1 token covers 1 hour of processed audio, with a 0.25-token minimum for short recordings. Bundles start at $5.00 for 3 tokens, and tokens are refunded automatically if identification fails.
Paste the link and get the full tracklist, start to finish.