{"id":2678388,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/2678388/?format=json","airdate":"2019-12-26T13:32:08-08:00","show":46227,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/46227/?format=json","image_uri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/184301cd-1170-45b3-b71b-4736f82b9135/24560363899-250.jpg","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"Earth","track_id":"c999f5b5-d20a-47f1-bd9e-bf5943056399","recording_id":null,"artist":"Lapalux","artist_ids":["0b5f6947-c6f2-43c2-8fed-5a77776728dd"],"album":"Amnioverse","release_id":"184301cd-1170-45b3-b71b-4736f82b9135","release_group_id":null,"labels":["Brainfeeder"],"label_ids":["20b3d6f9-9086-48d9-802f-5f808456a0ef"],"release_date":"2019-11-08","rotation_status":"Medium","is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"Lapalux (aka Stuart Howard) returns to Flying Lotus’ Brainfeeder for his fourth album. “Amnioverse”—“a sort of portmanteau of the amniotic sac and the universe,” he explains—revolves around notions of fluidity; that birth, life, death, and rebirth is a never ending continuum. <br> <br> Initial inspiration for the album came from a photograph of James Turrell’s Twilight Epiphany Skyspace installation in Texas. “I looked at it every day for three years whilst making this record.” explains Howard, “People are sitting in what looks like a waiting room lit in a purple hue, looking up at the dark night sky through a rectangular hole in the ceiling. The image has so much depth and means so much to me.... it seems like we are all in that waiting room, waiting to be somewhere or go somewhere. That’s what I tried to encapsulate in this record.” <br> <br> https://lapalux.bandcamp.com/album/amnioverse","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}