Introduction

What ArtistGuard does, why it exists, and how the monitoring engine works.

A track disappears. No email, no warning. You find out three days later because someone tweeted about it.

That's why ArtistGuard exists.

It watches Spotify around the clock and tells you the moment something changes. Track went offline, new release dropped, an ISRC got quietly swapped. You know within minutes.

ArtistGuard dashboard overview showing stats cards and recent changes feed

What gets monitored

Artist level: follower counts, monthly listeners, world rank, profile image, biography, verified checkmark, top cities, top tracks.

Release level: new albums, EPs and singles appearing, releases going offline, cover art, label name, artist credits.

Track level: tracks becoming unplayable, tracks coming back, new tracks added to existing releases, ISRC codes, explicit flag, artist credits.

How it works

You add an artist. ArtistGuard snapshots their full catalog. Every monitoring cycle it compares the current Spotify data against that snapshot, field by field. When a difference shows up, most changes wait for a second cycle to confirm it's real and not a Spotify glitch. After that, the alert fires.

Horizontal flow diagram showing the five-step monitoring pipeline from adding an artist to the alert firing

Severity levels

Severity What triggers it
Critical (red) Tracks or releases going offline
Warning (yellow) New release, ISRC swap, label change, listener shifts
Info (blue) Bio update, image change, top tracks moved

Changes feed showing mixed severities with critical, warning, and info badges

Check intervals

Plan How often
Free Every 2 hours
Artist Every 30 minutes
Pro Every 10 minutes
Business Every 5 minutes

On Business, a track that goes down at 2 AM is in your dashboard by 2:05. On Free, maybe a couple hours later.