Skip to content

setlists

2 posts with the tag “setlists”

AI Tools That Actually Help Working Musicians

Most musicians have tried an AI tool once, been unimpressed, and gone back to doing things manually. Usually because the output needed more editing than it would have taken to write from scratch, or because the tool was solving a problem they did not actually have.

This article is not about AI in theory. It is about the specific tasks where AI demonstrably saves time for working bands — and the adjacent tasks where it does not, so you know where not to bother.

AI attached to music tools is marketing language for a wide range of things, from statistical autocomplete to capable language models. The bar for claiming “AI-powered” is low, and the usefulness gap between tools is enormous.

The use cases where AI earns its place in a musician’s workflow have something in common: they are tasks that take meaningful time, follow a predictable structure, and produce output that benefits from human review before use. Not tasks that require creative judgment, musical ear, or relationship knowledge — those remain yours.

AI Setlist Generation: The Prompt-to-Playlist Workflow

Section titled “AI Setlist Generation: The Prompt-to-Playlist Workflow”

Building a setlist from scratch for a specific occasion — a corporate event, a private party, an outdoor festival — means pulling from your library with a particular audience and energy in mind. For a band with 60+ songs, this can take 20 minutes. For a band with 100+, longer.

AI Setlist Generation in Gigmeister takes a natural-language prompt and builds a setlist from your actual song library. Not a generic recommendation — your songs, in an order that fits the brief.

A useful prompt: “45 minutes, high energy, rock and funk, corporate crowd, avoid ballads and slow songs”

The model returns a setlist draft with duration, ordered songs from your library, and section markers if the duration splits cleanly into sets.

Duration math — given a target duration and your songs’ stored lengths, the model fills the time without you doing arithmetic. It accounts for transitions.

Basic energy curve — opener songs are generally uptempo. The set does not start with a ballad or end with a slow number unless the prompt asks for it.

Stylistic consistency — if the prompt specifies genre or feel, the model draws from songs tagged or described that way. Tagging your library pays off here.

Avoiding awkward repetition — songs in the same key back to back, or the same artist twice in a row for cover bands. The model catches these mechanically.

The opener and closer — the model does not know which song is your strongest or which one gets the best audience reaction. It makes a statistically reasonable guess. You know your songs.

Key transitions — the model considers key metadata, but it does not know that your arrangement of “Higher Ground” in G♭ is awkward to follow with your “Superstition” intro in E♭m because of how your keyboard player transitions. That knowledge lives with the band.

Songs that feel wrong back to back — two songs can be compatible in key and tempo and still clash in feel. Trust your ear on the review pass.

The review step is not optional. Treat AI output as a strong first draft — which is genuinely valuable — rather than a finished setlist.

AI Setlist Optimization: Reordering What You Have

Section titled “AI Setlist Optimization: Reordering What You Have”

You have the right songs for tonight. The order feels off. Maybe it was copied from a similar gig and does not fit tonight’s venue, or the band has been playing the same order for three months and it is getting stale.

AI Optimize Order resequences your existing setlist based on key flow, tempo pacing, and energy curve — the same variables a human music director considers, applied in seconds.

The optimisation considers:

  • Key relationships between consecutive songs (relative major/minor, fourth/fifth movement, awkward intervals)
  • Tempo clustering vs. variation (avoiding three consecutive 140 BPM songs, then three at 80)
  • Energy arc across the full set (the familiar wave: open strong, dip mid-set, build back up, close strong)
  • Section integrity — if you have a SET 1 and SET 2, the optimiser treats them independently

Generate — you need a setlist for a specific occasion and want a first draft from scratch. The songs are unknown when you start.

Optimize — you have the songs but want better sequencing. The selection is fixed; the order is what you are changing.

These are different tasks. Generate works best with a rich prompt that specifies duration, energy, and occasion. Optimize works best when the setlist already represents the right repertoire for the gig.

AI Chord Sheet Generation: From Lyrics to Performance-Ready

Section titled “AI Chord Sheet Generation: From Lyrics to Performance-Ready”

Getting a chord sheet for a new cover involves finding a source (which may be wrong), formatting it into bracket notation, placing chords above the right syllables, and adding any structural notes. For a busy band learning four new songs before a function gig, this adds up.

AI Chord Sheet Generation in Gigmeister (available on Gigmeister Pro) takes a song title and artist — or pasted lyrics — and generates a bracket-notation chord sheet with chords placed above lyrics. The output is formatted the same way as a hand-written chart: [Am]Walking down the [F]road.

This earns its keep on:

  • Common pop, rock, and folk songs with well-known progressions
  • Standard key arrangements (original key or a clearly documented common key)
  • Songs where the chord structure is consistent across verses and choruses

It is less reliable on:

  • Jazz standards with complex substitutions and reharms
  • Songs with unusual time signatures or uncommon chord voicings
  • Deep cuts from artists who play in unorthodox ways

The value here is not perfect accuracy. It is getting to 80% in 30 seconds rather than starting from a blank document.

Play through the generated chart once from top to bottom. There will typically be two or three chords that are wrong — a VII chord where there should be a V, a missing passing chord in the bridge. Fix those. Done.

Comparing this to the alternative — finding a tab site, evaluating the quality, copying into a formatter, placing chords manually — even an imperfect AI draft wins on time.

A venue sends a booking inquiry. It is specific enough that a template would not quite fit, but not so unusual that writing from scratch is justified. This is the most common type of booking email in a working band’s inbox — and also the one that takes the most time proportionally because every reply is slightly different.

AI draft replies in Gigmeister’s Shared Mailbox read the context: the incoming message, previous replies in the thread, internal notes added to the thread, and any linked gig details. The draft covers the standard information — availability, rate reference, rider link, next steps — in a professional tone that does not read like a template.

The draft arrives in the reply compose box, ready to edit. You adjust anything that needs personalising — fee negotiation, specific venue requirements, relationship context the model cannot know — and send.

For truly repetitive emails — deposit confirmations, availability checks at a fixed rate, show-day logistics — a reply template with variable substitution is faster and more reliable than an AI draft. Templates are instant and exact.

AI earns its place on the context-dependent replies: the first response to a detailed corporate brief, the reply to a venue with non-standard requirements, the follow-up after a rescheduled gig. The emails you actually stop and think about before writing. Use AI to clear the thinking phase; use templates to clear the mechanical phase.

It is worth being explicit about the limits, because “AI” as marketing language invites over-expectation.

Generate backing tracks — AI can generate audio in controlled settings, but not production-ready backing tracks for a specific song arrangement with your live band’s sound.

Real-time pitch or tempo analysis — Gigmeister does not listen to your band and adjust anything in real time. It uses the tempo and key data you have stored, which you entered.

Replace musical judgment about the room — the model optimises for documented musical relationships. It does not know that this particular crowd wants three slow songs in a row because it is a silver anniversary dinner. You do.

Remember a venue’s preferences across gigs — the model has no persistent memory of how specific clients responded to specific sets. That institutional knowledge lives with the band.

Understanding where AI stops being useful is as important as knowing where it helps.

A practical day before Saturday’s gig:

  1. Rough out the setlist — use AI Generate with a 90-minute, high-energy, general crowd prompt. Takes 30 seconds.
  2. Optimize the order — run AI Optimize on the draft. Review the key transitions. Accept or adjust.
  3. Generate chord sheets for two new covers — upload the songs, generate sheets, play through once to catch any wrong chords, fix them.
  4. Draft the confirmation reply to the venue — use AI Draft Reply on the thread. Adjust the fee reference and the load-in details. Send.
  5. The rest of the pre-gig time — practice.

None of this replaces musical decision-making. All of it removes the non-musical overhead that surrounds a typical gigging week. The tools do the structural work; the band brings the knowledge that matters.

Generate setlists, optimize song order, and create chord sheets with AI built into your band’s workflow. Create a free Gigmeister account or read the Setlists documentation to get started.

Building the Perfect Setlist: A Musician's Guide

A great setlist is not just a list of songs. It is a plan for how you are going to take an audience on a ride over the course of a night. The difference between a band that gets rebooked and one that does not often comes down to how well the set flows — not just what songs you play, but the order you play them in.

Here is a practical framework for building setlists that work, whether you are playing a 45-minute opening slot or a four-hour wedding.

Your first song sets the tone. Pick something the band plays confidently, that gets energy into the room quickly, and that does not require a long intro or buildup. You want to make a statement in the first 30 seconds.

Your last song is what people remember. Save one of your strongest tunes for the closer. If you are doing an encore, the real closer is the encore — the song before it just needs to make the audience want more.

Think of your set as a wave, not a straight line. The energy should rise and fall intentionally:

Opening block (songs 1-3): High energy. Establish the vibe. Get the audience engaged. These should be songs you could play in your sleep.

Mid-set dip (songs 4-7): Bring it down slightly. This is where you can put a ballad, a deep cut, or a song with a longer instrumental section. The audience needs contrast to appreciate the highs.

Build back up (songs 8-10): Ramp the energy again. Each song should be a small step up from the previous one.

Climax and close (last 2-3 songs): Your biggest songs. Maximum energy. Leave everything on stage.

For multi-set gigs, apply this pattern to each set independently. Each set should have its own arc.

Playing three songs in a row in the key of G is fine musically, but it can start to sound monotonous. Vary your keys across the setlist. Some transitions that work well:

  • Same key: Works when the tempo or feel changes significantly
  • Up a half step or whole step: Creates a natural lift in energy
  • Relative major/minor: Smooth transition (Am to C, Em to G)
  • Fourth or fifth: Strong, satisfying movement (C to F, G to C)

Avoid awkward jumps like tritone intervals (C to F#) back to back unless you have a clear transition planned. A few seconds of silence or stage banter can reset the listener’s ear between songs that clash harmonically.

Tempo is as important as key for flow. Three fast songs in a row will exhaust the audience (and the band). Three slow songs will lose the room.

A good rule of thumb: alternate tempos in groups. Two uptempo songs, then a mid-tempo, then a ballad, then back up. The exact pattern depends on your setlist length and the venue.

For dance bands: your audience needs tempo variety to catch their breath. Nobody dances for 90 minutes straight. Give them peaks and valleys.

Know exactly how long your set needs to be and plan accordingly. Add up song durations, then add transition time between songs:

  • Tight transitions (straight into the next song): 5-10 seconds
  • Normal transitions (brief tuning, count-in): 15-30 seconds
  • Banter breaks (talking to the audience): 30-60 seconds

For a typical 45-minute set of 10-12 songs, you will lose 3-5 minutes to transitions. Plan for it.

Your setlist should evolve with every gig. After each show, note what worked and what did not:

  • Did the energy dip too long in the middle?
  • Was there an awkward key change that needed a longer transition?
  • Did the audience respond better than expected to a particular song order?

Use this feedback to refine your next setlist. The best setlists are not built in one sitting — they are iterated over dozens of gigs.

Build your setlists with drag-and-drop ordering, automatic duration tracking, and section markers for multi-set gigs. Create a free Gigmeister account or read the full setlist documentation for setup details.