Information about plays

list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID

GET /v2/plays/3590287/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 3590287,
    "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3590287/?format=api",
    "airdate": "2025-12-12T20:38:39-08:00",
    "show": 65359,
    "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65359/?format=api",
    "image_uri": "https://ia801205.us.archive.org/33/items/mbid-34144ea0-7c00-485f-8042-29ebe63bda29/mbid-34144ea0-7c00-485f-8042-29ebe63bda29-11641248491_thumb500.jpg",
    "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia801205.us.archive.org/33/items/mbid-34144ea0-7c00-485f-8042-29ebe63bda29/mbid-34144ea0-7c00-485f-8042-29ebe63bda29-11641248491_thumb250.jpg",
    "song": "Quimbara",
    "track_id": "515ab507-0a5b-3c3f-a1fc-26469d13b962",
    "recording_id": "27e69fa6-5a6d-4d43-88ad-0efbec1434b2",
    "artist": "Celia Cruz & Johnny Pacheco",
    "artist_ids": [
        "7b8e1188-9ca4-4aa5-8393-172de6fa04de",
        "13f53407-3b0f-426b-8ca9-935456362412"
    ],
    "album": "Fania Records 1964-1980: The Original Sound of Latin New York",
    "release_id": "34144ea0-7c00-485f-8042-29ebe63bda29",
    "release_group_id": "b3b73068-735f-4763-878f-e1f1259f07ad",
    "labels": [
        "Strut Records"
    ],
    "label_ids": [
        "9ba9a0fb-d617-4906-9c1d-7bfa78087ff9"
    ],
    "release_date": "2011-03-29",
    "rotation_status": null,
    "is_local": false,
    "is_request": false,
    "is_live": false,
    "comment": "Celia Cruz (1925–2003) was a Cuban American singer popularly known as the \"Queen of Salsa.\"\nThe second of four children, Celia Cruz was born Úrsula Hilaria Celia de la Caridad Cruz Alfonso de la Santísima Trinidad in Havana, Cuba, in 1925.: https://nmaahc.si.edu/latinx/celia-cruz\n--\nHere, she joins with the co-founder of Fania Records, Johnny Pacheco. \n\n“There was always this debate between [bandleader] Tito Puente and Johnny,” says Ana Cristina Reymundo, a biographer of singer Celia Cruz. “Tito would say, ‘Johnny, pero que la salsa, se come, no se toca — We eat salsa, we don’t dance it, and we don’t play it.’ And then Johnny would laugh and say, ‘But Tito, the kids don’t know that.’ It was a truly brilliant marketing strategy to repackage to these beloved rhythms.”: https://www.wnyc.org/story/celia-johnny-they-invented-salsa/",
    "location": 1,
    "location_name": "Default",
    "play_type": "trackplay"
}