{"id":3590125,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3590125/?format=json","airdate":"2025-12-12T11:18:51-08:00","show":65355,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65355/?format=json","image_uri":"","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"Scratch","track_id":"8d32c3a2-0e3f-3126-9b04-98f0384c777b","recording_id":"8c3dcb03-06fa-4f34-8eb4-36854e55bc8d","artist":"Morphine","artist_ids":["42689657-cbec-4f66-a9ed-80f939ea23ed"],"album":"Yes","release_id":"f83ca559-591b-4980-9df3-495c1173201c","release_group_id":"85322744-ff6c-3ab9-a348-6fb3fdfd6447","labels":["Rykodisc"],"label_ids":["6dedcd20-3d02-4838-b583-5434eac199d9"],"release_date":"1995-03-21","rotation_status":null,"is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"\"The band’s sixty some-odd songs, recorded between 1991 and 1999 by Mark Sandman and a close coterie of musical enablers from the greater Cambridge area, aren’t necessarily of a particular time or genre. There was no ’90s low-rock movement, no nexus of guitar-less trios with saxophone, no prevailing trendline that would reasonably account for the many Sandband iterations, of which Morphine — a trio with Dana Colley on saxophone and two distinct drummers, first Jerome Deupree, then Billy Conway, and finally both Billy and Jerome — was the most prominent.\"\n\nRead more from this history of the band on Morphine's official website: https://morphineband.com/pages/morphine-biography","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}