Play Public Instance
Information about plays
list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID
GET /v2/plays/3551741/?format=api
https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3551741/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-09-11T15:05:12-07:00", "show": 64534, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/64534/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Never Gonna Tell It", "track_id": null, "recording_id": "a8cd9edd-f52b-47a3-a7e1-d6de50c0ae59", "artist": "Philippé Wynne", "artist_ids": [ "9bc335e1-bcd8-4b34-bc10-df3b1fca7049" ], "album": "Six Degrees of P-Funk: The Best of George Clinton & His Funk Family", "release_id": null, "release_group_id": "cedaee0d-bb0a-3b3c-ab92-b0b79b6ec63c", "labels": [ "Legacy" ], "label_ids": [ "45ffe1d8-92da-4750-9a4a-f42861f46e2c" ], "release_date": "2003-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "\"Never Gonna Tell It\" by Philippe Wynne is a cover of Funkadelic's \"I'm Never Gonna Tell It\".\n--\nBorn in Detroit, Michigan, and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, Wynne began his musical career as a gospel singer. He soon switched to R&B and attained some measure of success, singing with Bootsy Collins’s Pacemakers in 1968 and with James Brown’s J.B.’s shortly thereafter. Wynne then spent time in Germany as the lead singer of the Afro Kings, a band from Liberia, before he replaced his cousin, G. C. Cameron, as one of the lead vocalists for The Spinners. He sang with the group until 1977, during which they achieved several successful albums and singles.\nWynne then launched a solo career with Alan Thicke as his manager.\n\n Read more of is biography here: https://georgeclinton.com/family/philippe-wynne/", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }{ "id": 3551741, "uri": "