I listen to a lot of DJ sets. But I’ve always been disappointed at how little attention streaming giants give to them, with a browser tab on YouTube being the best available desktop experience, which I very much dislike. Not only that, but tracklists are - most of the time - nowhere to be found. Finally, as a Last.fm veteran, who likes to have a precise listening history, despite having installed a browser extension to scrobble music from YouTube, for DJ sets, we have an issue:
If I listen to an Amelie Lens set for two hours, Last.fm only knows I listened to a YouTube video. It doesn’t know the tracks. It doesn’t know the artists. It doesn’t know anything useful, which is tragic for someone who has been compulsively scrobbling music for more than twenty years and still thinks Last.fm is one of the best ideas the internet ever had.
So I built DJ Scrobbler.
It lets me search for DJ sets, pulls tracklists from places like 1001Tracklists when available, plays the set, and scrobbles the individual tracks to Last.fm as they come in. But forget Last.fm if you don’t even know what it is: It also packs favorites, history, playback progress, visual themes, and more, in a desktop-app experience that makes it feel like something I actually want to keep open, at the same level as (but not competing with) your Spotify app (I use Tidal myself though).

I’ve been working on it for a while now, but this release is the first one I am comfortable telling people to try. Not a prototype, not a proof-of-concept anymore, but a real public beta that should be usable on macOS, Windows, and Linux.
The funny part is that this also became one of the clearest examples of how I currently like working with AI coding tools. DJ Scrobbler was heavily AI-assisted, but not in the “press button, receive startup” fantasy way. More like: I knew exactly what I wanted, which features, what UI/UX, the tech stack, the shape, the taste, the broken little edge cases, etc… and then I kept steering until the thing stopped feeling like a demo and started feeling like software. Plus it’s free and open-source.
It’s been a long time since I made something for public consumption. Nostalgia is probably the most repeated word around here, and this clearly brings back lovely memories from my old MewSeek days (2008-2014), when I made something actually useful that people really enjoyed… unsurprisingly it was also an app around music. My expectations may be a bit too high right now, which is I can’t wait to get this to v1.0.
In the meantime, if you listen to a lot of DJ sets, whether you care about Last.fm or not, this should still be for you. Hope you like it. This is probably the moment when I’ll be most open to receiving suggestions, aside from bug reports, which I also very much encourage you to send my way.
Ah yes, I made a whole badass website for it too: