{"id":3591590,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3591590/?format=json","airdate":"2025-12-15T21:05:55-08:00","show":65389,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65389/?format=json","image_uri":"","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"Fuga a portales subale hay lugares","track_id":null,"recording_id":null,"artist":"Perritos Genéricos","artist_ids":[],"album":null,"release_id":null,"release_group_id":null,"labels":[],"label_ids":[],"release_date":null,"rotation_status":null,"is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"fuga a portales subale hay lugares reads like a stream-of-consciousness note that accidentally became a title—urgent, conspiratorial, and oddly hopeful. That kind of naming usually points to music that values mood and narrative over tidy branding. The experience of the track is less about arriving at a single “meaning” and more about letting it open doors: you follow fragments, you catch phrases, and you move through emotional rooms quickly. It plays well for listeners who like songs that feel like artifacts from a larger world—like you walked in halfway through a story and you’re trying to catch the plot by feeling it rather than decoding it. The best way to approach it is as motion: a “fuga” suggests escape, and the track’s energy supports that idea—restless, searching, and slightly tilted toward the surreal. It’s a good add when you want a playlist to feel less predictable, more like a late-night rabbit hole where you keep clicking because something feels real even if you can’t summarize it yet.\u2028Listen: https://open.spotify.com/search/Perritos%20Gen%C3%A9ricos%20fuga%20a%20portales","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}