Rekwest vs mySet: The Best Song Request App for Live Performers in 2026

Rekwest vs mySet: The Best Song Request App for Live Performers in 2026

May 3, 2026·DJ Roadvibe
DJ Roadvibe

Rekwest and mySet both let an audience request songs in real time and tip the performer, but they are built around very different business models. mySet is a mobile app, fan pays platform that turns requests into a bidding war. Rekwest is a multi platform request engine that supports DJs, venues, and live bands with deep integrations and flexible monetization. This guide explains where each fits and which one to pick for your gigs.

TL;DR

Criterion Rekwest mySet
Cost to performer Free, Pro $6.99/mo, Enterprise $34.99/mo Free for artists
Cost to fan/guest Free (tipping optional) $1.50 + CC processing per transaction (or artist absorbs)
Guest experience Browser, no app or sign up Mobile app required (iOS/Android)
Streaming integrations Spotify, Apple Music, TIDAL, SoundCloud None native
DJ software Serato, Rekordbox, Virtual DJ, djay, Traktor None
Repertoire / setlist Yes (Pro) Yes, central to product
Tipping & monetization Tipping, donations, VIP Bidding war model. Highest paid request goes to top
Catalog source Streaming services Your own setlist
Recurring events Yes (Pro) Limited
Analytics Advanced (Pro) Basic
Best for DJs, venues, bands, radio Solo musicians and cover bands focused on tip volume

Verdict: mySet is a strong tool for solo musicians who only play their own setlist and want guests to bid for songs. Rekwest is the broader platform. It covers the same band use case but also DJs, venues, radio, and any event that pulls from a streaming catalog rather than a fixed song list.

What Rekwest is

Rekwest is a song request platform for working music professionals: mobile DJs, club DJs, wedding DJs, live bands, radio stations, and event venues. Guests scan a QR code and request from the catalogs of Spotify, Apple Music, TIDAL, or SoundCloud, or from your own repertoire / crates. No app, no sign up. Performers can also restrict requests to a curated repertoire (live bands, themed DJ nights) and accepted tracks export to streaming playlists or sync directly into Serato, Rekordbox, Virtual DJ, djay, or Traktor. Tipping is available across plans. Pro is $6.99 per month and Enterprise is $34.99 per month.

What mySet is

mySet is a song request app focused on live musicians and cover bands. Artists upload their setlist and fans use the iOS or Android app to request songs, attach a payment, and bid up requests they care most about. The request list is sorted by price. The highest paying request rises to the top, and other fans can pool money on the same song to push it higher. mySet is free for artists; fans pay $1.50 plus credit card processing per transaction (or the artist can choose to absorb the fee). Payouts go through PayPal.

Head to head

Pricing model

mySet uses a transactional model: artists pay nothing, but fans pay $1.50 plus card processing on every request. The platform is free for the performer, and revenue flows from the audience.

Rekwest uses a SaaS model: the free tier is fully usable (unlimited events, unlimited requests), Pro is $6.99 per month, and Enterprise is $34.99 per month. Tipping is a separate, optional layer rather than a per request fee. Performers can choose to require tips, suggest tips, or skip them entirely.

So what: If your audience is willing to pay per request, mySet’s bidding model can generate strong tip volume. If your audience expects free requests (typical at weddings, corporate gigs, club nights, public venues), the per request fee on mySet creates friction.

Audience friction and access

mySet requires fans to download a mobile app, register, and link a payment method before they can request. That is high friction at any event where guests are not prepared in advance.

Rekwest works in a browser via QR code. No app, no sign up. Tipping is offered after the request, not before, so guests are not blocked at the entry point.

So what: App required workflows convert well for a dedicated fan base that already follows the artist (think a regular band’s residency, a Patreon style audience). They convert poorly for casual event crowds. Rekwest is the lower friction option for general audience events.

Setlist vs streaming catalog

mySet is built around the artist’s own setlist. Fans request only from a list the performer has uploaded. There is no Spotify or Apple Music catalog search.

Rekwest supports both modes. By default, guests browse a streaming catalog (Spotify, Apple Music, TIDAL, SoundCloud), which is what DJs need. On Pro, you can flip to repertoire only mode and limit requests to tracks you actually play. The same model mySet uses, but inside a multi purpose tool.

So what: mySet’s catalog model only works for artists who play exclusively their own material. A DJ, club, or venue that plays from a vast streaming catalog cannot really use mySet. Rekwest covers both shapes of event.

Tipping and monetization model

mySet’s bidding war is genuinely innovative. Sorting by price creates competition and gamifies tipping. For a packed cover band gig, this can produce more revenue than flat tipping.

Rekwest supports tipping, donations, optional minimum tips per request, and messages on requests. It also has VIP guest features for higher tier supporters. The model is more flexible. You can run a free request page, a tip suggested page, or a tip required page.

So what: If your entire revenue strategy is “fans pay to hear their favorites,” mySet’s auction format is sharp. If you are a DJ, a venue, or a band that doesn’t want every interaction to be transactional, Rekwest’s optional tipping model fits the gig better.

DJ software and streaming integrations

mySet doesn’t integrate with DJ software, doesn’t sync to streaming playlists, and doesn’t pull catalog from Spotify or Apple Music. It is not built for that use case.

Rekwest integrates with Serato, Rekordbox, Virtual DJ, djay, and Traktor for live queueing, and exports accepted requests to Spotify, Apple Music, TIDAL, or SoundCloud playlists.

So what: This is essentially a non comparison. If you need DJ software or streaming integration, mySet isn’t the tool. Rekwest is.

Venue and event type fit

mySet targets solo artists, duos, cover bands, and live performers who play their own setlists. The mental model is “fans of an artist coming to see that artist.”

Rekwest fits a much wider range: clubs, bars, wedding DJs, mobile DJs, school dances, radio stations, karaoke nights, and live bands. Venue features like recurring events, kiosk mode, and white label theming have no equivalent on mySet.

So what: Match the tool to the event. mySet is sharp for one specific use case. Rekwest covers many.

Analytics and post event marketing

Rekwest Pro provides advanced analytics on requests, guests, and engagement. Enterprise adds automatic post event marketing emails to attendees, which is a meaningful revenue lever for performers and venues that depend on repeat bookings.

mySet’s reporting is more limited and oriented around per show tip totals.

So what: If your business depends on understanding what worked and following up with attendees, Rekwest’s analytics and email automation are far more useful than mySet’s per show summary.

Verdict

For a solo musician or cover band that sells the experience of “pay to hear your favorite,” mySet is a sharp, well positioned tool with an interesting bidding model. The transactional fee structure means there is no SaaS subscription to manage, just a per request payment from fans.

For everyone else, including DJs, clubs, wedding performers, mobile DJs, radio stations, venues, and bands that want flexibility, Rekwest is the better fit. The browser based guest experience converts more event audiences into engaged participants, the streaming and DJ software integrations mean accepted requests actually flow into the playing environment, and the optional tipping model doesn’t force every interaction to be paid.

If you are a band that uses both, a tip driven Tuesday residency and a wedding gig on Saturday, Rekwest is the platform that handles both nights, while mySet only fits the residency.

FAQs

Do fans pay to use mySet?

Yes. Fans pay $1.50 plus standard credit card processing per transaction. The artist can optionally absorb the fee. Rekwest does not charge guests to submit requests; tipping is optional.

Do guests need to install an app for mySet?

Yes. mySet requires fans to download the iOS or Android app. Rekwest works in the browser via a QR code with no installation.

Does mySet integrate with Spotify or Apple Music?

No. mySet uses the artist’s uploaded setlist as the catalog. Rekwest pulls catalog from Spotify, Apple Music, TIDAL, and SoundCloud.

Which is better for cover bands?

Both work for cover bands. mySet’s bidding model can drive more tips per gig if your audience is the type that pays to hear their favorites. Rekwest’s repertoire only mode covers the same use case while also working at non cover band gigs.

Can I use mySet for a DJ event?

Not really. mySet is built around a setlist, not a streaming catalog, and has no DJ software integration. Rekwest is designed for that workflow.

How do payouts work?

mySet pays artists via PayPal. Rekwest supports tipping payouts through standard payment processors with the major card and wallet options.

How much does Rekwest cost?

Free for unlimited events and requests. Pro is $6.99 per month and Enterprise is $34.99 per month.

Related comparisons

Try Rekwest free at rekwest.app. Your guests don’t need an app, an account, or a credit card to send a request.