Report
Know what you
actually played.
Report turns your gig history into numbers you can use — most-played songs, full concert history, setlist ideas. Every play is logged automatically from the gigs in your calendar, so it reflects real nights, not rehearsals.
The numbers
Gigs played, songs used, total plays — at a glance.
Open Report and the top of the screen shows the headline stats for the band: how many gigs you've played, how many unique songs you've pulled out live, and the total number of plays across every night.
Below that sits the Most played list with a period switch — all time, this year, or the last 90 days. It's the honest answer to "what are we actually a band that plays?" — the songs that keep coming back, ranked by how often you've played them.
An activity graph shows plays per month over the last twelve months, so you can see busy stretches and quiet ones at a glance.
- Gigs, unique songs and total plays up top
- Most-played list — all time, this year, or 90 days
- Plays-per-month graph for the last 12 months
- Separate numbers for your private library and each band
- 1Valerie38×
- 2Superstition31×
- 3Ain't No Sunshine27×
- 4Mustang Sally24×
- 5Sweet Home Chicago22×
Build a setlist from your most-played songs with a single tap — a ready-to-play set of the material the band knows cold. Or open any night in the history and re-run that exact setlist for tonight's gig.
The new setlist lands in your song library like any other, ready to reorder, rename or share with the band.
Often played together surfaces the song pairs that tend to follow each other. Not played in a while flags material that's gone cold — a quick way to freshen up the repertoire before the next gig.
History & ideas
Every night, grouped automatically. Turn it back into a setlist.
Report keeps a full gig history, grouped automatically — songs played within a couple of hours count as one gig, tied to the venue and date. Scroll back through every concert you've done without ever entering a thing by hand.
From that history you get setlist ideas: make a setlist of your top songs in one tap, or recreate an earlier night exactly as you played it. Great for a repeat booking at the same venue.
Often played together shows the song pairs that live next to each other in your sets, and not played in a while points to material worth dusting off — two easy ways to keep the show fresh.
When you're done, export the whole report as a PDF — stats, most-played, history and graph — for a manager, a band meeting or your own records.
How it's counted
Plays log themselves — from real gigs, not rehearsals.
You never log a play by hand. When you open songs during a gig you've put in the calendar, Strofa records them as plays for that night. Browsing your library at home or practising doesn't count — so the numbers stay honest and reflect actual concerts.
And it's smart about the band: if several members open the same song during the same gig, it counts as one play, not one per phone. The stats describe the band's night, not how many people were looking at their screens.
- Plays captured automatically during calendar gigs
- Rehearsals and casual browsing don't count
- Multiple members on one song = one play
- Export the full report as a PDF anytime
One tap turns any night in the history back into a fresh setlist — perfect when you're booked at the same place again.
Get started
Your gigs, counted. Your next setlist, one tap away.
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