{"id":3568775,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3568775/?format=json","airdate":"2025-10-23T03:57:42-07:00","show":64908,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/64908/?format=json","image_uri":"","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"Spirit in the Dark","track_id":null,"recording_id":"ac41c36e-5912-4b95-8b05-1d5a21a9f676","artist":"Aretha Franklin","artist_ids":["2f9ecbed-27be-40e6-abca-6de49d50299e"],"album":"Spirit in the Dark","release_id":null,"release_group_id":"d4596b8b-ffa2-32ca-968b-f489883db646","labels":["Atlantic"],"label_ids":["50c384a2-0b44-401b-b893-8181173339c7"],"release_date":"1970-08-24","rotation_status":null,"is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"\"Spirit...\"[was]a cathartic 1970 testimonial documenting the fusion of house-wrecking gospel and gut-wrenching soul that made Aretha Franklin Aretha Franklin. It is not her most famous record. It is not her top-selling record. What it is is her truest record, the one that best captures her essential ache—the pain of a black woman clamoring for freedom from the domineering men who suffocated her childhood, manipulated her career, mangled her personal life, and more broadly speaking oppressed her race and robbed her dignity. It’s an assertion of personhood, a monument to resilience in the face of pain.: pitchfork.com","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}