{"id":345899,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/345899/?format=json","airdate":"2019-06-25T09:27:43-07:00","show":5767,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/5767/?format=json","image_uri":"","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"Surrender","track_id":"9224b283-6bbf-365f-9999-cd793d51d0d6","recording_id":null,"artist":"Cheap Trick","artist_ids":["9f870653-72b0-4c6d-8c59-439a95963e09"],"album":"The Essential Cheap Trick","release_id":"aaee9217-d2a4-4402-b60c-55ad3552ac29","release_group_id":null,"labels":["Epic"],"label_ids":["8f638ddb-131a-4cc3-b3d4-7ebdac201b55"],"release_date":"2004-01-01","rotation_status":"Library","is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"In a Blender magazine interview, Cheap Trick 's drummer Bun E. Carlos recalls, \"We had that track back in 1975. We used to rehearse in the basement of Rick [Nielsen]'s dad's music shop on Seventh Avenue in Rockford, Illinois. As soon as I heard it, I thought it was a really interesting lyric.\"\n\nRick Nielsen said: \"I used to hear my friends saying they thought their parents were strange. The first thing I got was the opening of the chorus: 'Mommy's all right, daddy's all right.' It just rolled off at one sitting. Those opening lines, 'Mother told me, yes, she told me I 'd meet girls like you.' that 's advice to the lovelorn, and obviously inspired by the old Shirelles hit 'Mama said that there'd be days like this.' It 's a good way to start a song, if you can make it go with a chord progression.\"","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}