Built for the way ensembles actually work

Pick your role. See what changes.

Backstage Baton is one platform with a different daily experience for every role in your ensemble — from the member checking tonight's call time to the president closing out the concert season.

7 roles. One platform. Everything your band needs, already in it.

For Music Directors

Spend your time on the music, not the spreadsheet.

Backstage Baton handles the parts of running a band that have nothing to do with making music — building concerts, scheduling rehearsals, keeping the library current, getting the program in front of members on time, and writing your weekly note when you're slammed. You stay focused on rehearsing the band.

Picking the music

Less time on the catalog. More time on the music.

  • Type a title — the rest fills itself in.

    When you add a piece, Backstage Baton recognizes most band literature and fills in the composer, grade, duration, and a YouTube link. You don't retype anything from the publisher's page.

  • Stuck on what to program? Get a draft in seconds — instrumentation-aware, grade-sensitive.

    Tell Backstage Baton the date, the ensemble, and the vibe you want. It drafts a setlist matched to who actually plays in the band and what level your group reads at. Start editing instead of starting from blank.

  • Have last year's program as a PDF? Upload it.

    Backstage Baton reads the file (PDF, spreadsheet, even a photo of a paper program) and adds the pieces to your library. You don't type the titles in.

  • See what your library is missing.

    One page shows you which pieces have parts missing, which orders haven't arrived yet, and which loans are overdue. No spreadsheet to maintain.

Building the concert

A guided setup, then everything flows from there.

  • A four-step wizard takes you from blank to ready.

    Pick the date and venue. Set the timeline. Build the setlist. Schedule the rehearsals. All in one flow, all on one screen.

  • Rehearsals schedule themselves around your concerts.

    Tell Backstage Baton your ensemble rehearses Tuesdays at 7. New performances auto-book Tuesday rehearsals leading up to each concert — and skip the Tuesday when the concert itself falls on one.

  • Setup time, call time, downbeat — one place, every reminder.

    Enter the three times once. Members see them on the calendar, in the rehearsal reminder email, and on their phone the day of the show.

  • Write what you want the audience to feel.

    Your "director's vision" for the concert appears on the published setlist and in the weekly digest. Members read it before they walk in.

Filling the chairs

Your roster is already built. You just adjust who moved.

  • Make the concert — your players are already on it.

    Whoever's in the ensemble is automatically on the concert roster. Add a new clarinet to the ensemble and they're on every upcoming concert. Same for removals.

  • Last concert's seating is already in place.

    When you create a spring concert, the chair order from your winter concert is right there waiting. You just adjust who moved up.

  • Color tells you when you're short — or overcrowded.

    If you're missing a clarinet for a piece, the bubble turns red. If you've got too many trumpets, also red. Green when you're right at capacity.

  • Section leaders set their own chairs — without emailing you a list.

    Your clarinet section leader can rearrange her chairs from her phone. You see the result; you don't have to coordinate it.

Going live with the program

Build it in private. Announce when you're ready.

  • Build it in stages. Members only see the finished version.

    You can lock in the date and venue, then come back next week to finalize the setlist. Members see the calendar entry the whole time, but the setlist and your notes stay private until you publish.

  • Decide whether to email the announcement.

    When you publish, Backstage Baton asks if you want to email members "the program is now available." Tick it for the announcement, leave it unchecked for a quiet update.

  • Need to cancel? One click, and members know in 60 seconds.

    Cancel a concert and members get a red urgent email immediately if it's within 48 hours. If you reverse it later, they get a green "back on as scheduled" follow-up so nobody misses the correction.

  • Venue changes within 48 hours of a concert? Members are told.

    Any change to date, time, or venue on a concert that's less than two days out goes out as a red urgent email automatically. You don't have to write it.

Conducting day-of

Backstage Baton sets the room up so you can focus on the downbeat.

  • A seating chart sized to your actual stage — drawn for you.

    Backstage Baton draws a chair chart based on your roster and the venue's stage size. Drag a few chairs around if you need to. Print it for the stage crew.

  • Section leaders take attendance — you don't have to.

    Each section leader marks their own players present from My Section. You see the totals; you don't have to set up tablets at the door.

  • Counting the audience? One tap per person walking in.

    Volunteers at the door count attendees on a phone — one tap per person, no logins. The count survives if their phone reloads. If you report to SCFD or another arts grant, the count breaks down by county automatically.

The weekly note from you

A real director-voiced email — without you writing it.

  • Reply to one Thursday email. The Sunday digest writes itself.

    Backstage Baton asks you and your board what to highlight this week. You reply in plain English from your phone. On Sunday it sends a polished email to the whole band.

  • It sounds like you wrote it. Because you did — sort of.

    Backstage Baton blends your reply with what's on the calendar and writes the email in your voice. No "Director X passed along that..." narrator stuff. Members tell you they thought you wrote it yourself.

  • Pieces with recordings in your library link out automatically.

    YouTube and streaming links you saved on a piece appear next to it in the digest. Members listen on the drive in.

AI that helps where you want it

Optional. Always labeled. Never in your way.

  • Suggest a Program — when you need a starting point.

    Tell Backstage Baton what you're aiming for; it drafts a setlist. Use it, edit it, or ignore it. Your call every time.

  • Fetch the publisher's details for you.

    Paste a link to the piece on the publisher's site and Backstage Baton pulls the instrumentation, grade, and duration into your library.

  • Smart Import for messy data.

    Upload a 50-row spreadsheet with weird column names. Backstage Baton figures out which column is the email, catches duplicates, and asks you about anything it's unsure of.

What directors say after their first season

“I used to spend Sunday evenings writing the weekly email and updating the library spreadsheet. Now I reply to one prompt on Thursday and Backstage Baton does the rest. I get the evening back.”

— Music director, second season on Backstage Baton

Across every role

What every Backstage Baton band gets

Some things are true for everyone — whether you're a brand-new member or the board treasurer.

Two automated emails a week.

The only automated messages members get on a normal week are the weekly digest and the day-of rehearsal reminder. Officers can send the band whatever they need to via the email relay — Backstage Baton just doesn't pile on with automated noise.

Works like an app on your phone

Add Backstage Baton to your home screen on iPhone or Android. One tap from the login page and it installs.

Your calendar stays in sync

Subscribe once. Every published rehearsal and concert shows up in your phone calendar — and updates itself when something changes.

Last-minute changes go out fast

If a venue or time changes within 48 hours of an event, members get a red urgent email immediately. You don't have to write it.

Members control their own privacy

Each member chooses who can see their phone number and email. Admins always have access — for everyone else, the member decides.

Looks like your band

Your logo, your colors, your wording. Every email and every screen carries your band's identity, not ours.

See it in your ensemble

Most demos take 30 minutes. We tailor the walkthrough to the roles you bring on the call — bring your director, your librarian, and whoever signs the checks.