Smart Fill
Add a concert from a URL, a PDF programme or a photo of a poster. Smart Fill reads it and structures the whole event — date, venue, programme — for you.
Your musical journey, archived. Performances, discoveries, knowledge — all in one place.
Local-first and offline-fast — everything from your repertoire and gear to your finances and your story, in one private logbook on your device.
Free to start · iOS & Android
Everything in one place
From the next concert to a lifetime of repertoire, gear and finances — organised, private, and always with you.
Add a concert from a URL, a PDF programme or a photo of a poster. Smart Fill reads it and structures the whole event — date, venue, programme — for you.
Every concert, rehearsal and engagement in week, month or year views. Group by ensemble, track programmes, fees, post-concert ratings, and attach photos or PDFs.
A curated, offline catalog of composers and instrument makers on your device, enriched with biographies and portraits from Wikidata and Wikimedia — plus in-depth, AI-enriched insights for each one.
Your works and composers with rich piece descriptions and IMSLP links. Attach PDF parts and full scores directly under each work, so your music is always one tap away.
Every venue and city you've played, plotted on a live world map, plus full tour planning from first date to last.
A chronological heatmap of every composer and maker in your world — see your artistic universe span the centuries.
Deep analytics on your performing life: minutes on stage, eras and nationalities, top composers, earnings, travel distance and ratings — with AI-written summaries and a world map of where you've performed.
"On this day in classical music history" — AI-written, Wikidata-verified stories tied to today, drawn from your library and the wider canon.
Find any concert, work or venue in seconds — filter by composer, ensemble, city or date across your entire performance history.
Scan physical scores and documents straight to PDF on your device. Pair with Smart Fill or manual entry to build your library.
Manage instruments, bows, strings, accessories and concert attire. Build gear sets, log service and maintenance, keep receipts, and get reminders before the next string change.
An organized local archive for every contract, score and receipt. Scan to PDF and keep it all in one place on your device.
Turn a season, a single concert or today's anniversary into a beautiful, share-ready story card for Instagram and beyond.
One-click professional PDF reports and libraries — with headers and labels available in 30+ languages.
A curated morning read of classical music news from leading publishers — fetched when you open it, summarized for quick scanning.
Share concert metadata offline between devices — scan a QR code to import events into your logbook without attachments or cloud upload.
Automatic on-device backups, optional AES-256 encrypted exports, and section-by-section restore. Export your library metadata anytime. Your archive, your keys.
Local-first
Built local-first on Isar for instant, offline-first speed — your library, catalog and backups stay on your device. No cloud database sync. AI features use Google Vertex AI only when you invoke them.
Offline-first
Instant, works without a connection
AES-256 encrypted exports
Optional password-protected backup files
No tracking, no ads
No third-party analytics
AI features like Smart Fill, Discover and insights run through Google Vertex AI; only structured, aggregated data is sent — never your raw private library. No cloud database sync.
No ads, no tracking, no third-party analytics. Your repertoire, finances and documents stay on your device. AI runs only when you choose it.
Behind the app
"I spent years as a cellist in the Vienna Philharmonic and Vienna State Opera, and now as a member of the Vienna Symphony — keeping track of repertoire and concerts across three orchestras. No tool did exactly what I needed, so I built one. ArtistLog is what I wished had existed from day one."
— Primož Zalaznik, cellist & developer
Start free today — your repertoire, gear and story, organised at last.