Gigs turns your concert history into a personal archive of live music


People always carry their phones to record special moments at concerts, but they often never watch those videos again. Gigsa new concert-tracking app launching this week, wants to change that. The iOS app helps live music fans turn their years of concerts, tickets, photo and video memories into a personal archive with the help of Apple’s on-device AI.

To add a concert to Gigs, users can import a ticket, email, screenshot, or even a website link, and the app will use Apple’s enterprise forms to extract dates, venues, lineups, and other information to populate the lineup.

For those who already track their concert history elsewhere, such as Setlist.fm or Concert Archives, there is an option to automatically import years of concert and festival attendance by linking their accounts.

Image credits:Gigs

Once concerts are added to the app, users can sync those dates to their personal calendar, get reminders about ticket sales, browse expected set lists, and view other information about the show or artist. When the concert is over, the app reminds the user to rate the show as well as upload photos, videos, and other artwork from the event.

Gigs was created by independent developer Hidde van der Ploeg, who has worked on it previously Homemade artificial intelligence applicationwhich creates Apple Music playlists; Music discovery app Play now; Helmet for contact app store; And other mobile applications. With Gigs, he wanted to create an app for people who enjoy live music and could use help remembering the date of their events.

Image credits:Gigs

By curating concert memories in Gigs, users have the option to revisit favorite shows from their past while gaining more insights into their concert history. Through the app’s statistics dashboard, users can track categories like most viewed artists, favorite venues, most visited cities, busiest years, and average ratings. The app also includes milestones to celebrate a user’s journey along the way — such as once they’ve watched their first 10 shows or when they cross 1,000, depending on the type of concertgoer.

The app is designed for iOS 26 with the look and feel of Liquid Glass, and includes home screen widgets to count down to the next event. Siri integration allows users to check upcoming shows, access tickets, or rate events via voice. Additionally, all shows are indexed by Apple’s Spotlight for system-wide searching, and the app includes several custom icons.

The wagons are Free download An in-app purchase of $2.99 ​​per month unlocks additional features, such as data export, achievements, deeper insights, unlimited storage of photos and videos, and support for importing concert history from other services or through a CSV file. A $19.99 per year subscription is also available, or Gigs can be bundled with NowPlaying for further discounts.

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