Information about plays

list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID

GET /v2/plays/2680360/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 2680360,
    "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/2680360/?format=api",
    "airdate": "2019-12-31T10:01:00-08:00",
    "show": 46264,
    "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/46264/?format=api",
    "image_uri": "",
    "thumbnail_uri": "",
    "song": "Fake Empire",
    "track_id": "7dca31e6-02b3-3f77-b31f-a2f6424ee31c",
    "recording_id": null,
    "artist": "The National",
    "artist_ids": [
        "664c3e0e-42d8-48c1-b209-1efca19c0325"
    ],
    "album": "Boxer",
    "release_id": "9bce96cc-8d4f-38f3-97d5-decb81ab7119",
    "release_group_id": null,
    "labels": [
        "Beggars Banquet"
    ],
    "label_ids": [],
    "release_date": "2007-05-22",
    "rotation_status": "Library",
    "is_local": false,
    "is_request": false,
    "is_live": false,
    "comment": "This song was written by guitarist Bryce Dessner and features a horn fanfare penned by Padma Newsome, from the band Clogs. Dessner said about the song's original concept: \"Conceptually I said I would love to write a song that was based on a certain polyrhythm, the four-over-three pattern, which is what you hear in the piano. It's something I, personally, have never heard in rock music. What's interesting is the song sounds like it's in four, but it's in three. The harmonies and the way I'm playing the piano music are actually incredibly simple—sort of like 'Chopsticks' simple—with this really weird rhythm. At the end we said, Oh, wouldn't it be cool if we had a horn fanfare, so Padma wrote this very Steve Reichian minimalist horn fanfare.\"",
    "location": 1,
    "location_name": "Default",
    "play_type": "trackplay"
}