Play Public Instance
Information about plays
list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID
GET /v2/plays/3547546/?format=api
https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3547546/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-09-01T11:10:21-07:00", "show": 64446, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/64446/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Killing in the Name", "track_id": "762fb386-6710-4117-8fb1-7a01a25ab824", "recording_id": "75e97e8f-477a-4df4-9427-56b10c8f21db", "artist": "Rage Against the Machine", "artist_ids": [ "3798b104-01cb-484c-a3b0-56adc6399b80" ], "album": "…From Los Angeles, California", "release_id": "615d25b9-a9bc-4c24-8fe7-634a5b020f9b", "release_group_id": "63068026-9a79-45e3-a98f-c4c3f98654fc", "labels": [ "Epic" ], "label_ids": [ "8f638ddb-131a-4cc3-b3d4-7ebdac201b55" ], "release_date": "1999-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "“Killing in the Name” was written six months after the Rodney King beating and the ensuing riots in Los Angeles. Zack De La Rocha never sounded as angry as he does here as he slowly builds on the repeating line, “Some of those that work forces / Are the same that burn crosses.”\n\nHere, forces refer to the police, military, or other groups who are meant to protect but, in certain cases, have abused their power. He relates these groups to those that burn crosses, a symbol used by the white supremacist group, the Ku Klux Klan. But Rage doesn’t put all the blame on the “forces”, because a bigger “Machine” is puppeteering, and, of course, they just do what they tell them. As the protest climaxes and the instrumental becomes chaotic, the outro screams perpetually against the power structures of today: “Fuck you, I won’t do what you tell me!” – Chris Thiessen https://www.popmatters.com/100-timeless-protest-songs-list/7\n\nhttps://www.ratm.com/", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }{ "id": 3547546, "uri": "