{"id":3591594,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3591594/?format=json","airdate":"2025-12-15T21:20:00-08:00","show":65389,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65389/?format=json","image_uri":"","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"You Talk Too Much","track_id":null,"recording_id":"df287698-cef1-473e-a304-3f10fd2315f9","artist":"NORWAYY","artist_ids":["6240c79b-25bb-4c6d-9d6d-7f1abfe619ab"],"album":"NORWAYY","release_id":null,"release_group_id":"b89e3fba-5698-4883-8a17-b8d3ea8a3b65","labels":[],"label_ids":[],"release_date":"2016-11-26","rotation_status":null,"is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"Public biographical coverage for Norwayy is limited in mainstream sources, but the track’s presence and release context are clearly documented on major streaming platforms. \u2028You Talk Too Much is a perfect title for a song that wants to cut through noise. It’s accusation, boundary, and punchline all at once. The track lands best when you hear it as a confrontation that’s also a kind of liberation: naming the dynamic, refusing to keep participating, and turning irritation into motion. Songs with this framing often succeed because they tap into a universal social fatigue—people explaining themselves endlessly, people performing opinions, people filling silence because silence scares them. The music can carry that critique even without heavy-handed messaging: tension in the groove, clipped phrasing, hooks that feel like repetition of a complaint you’ve said too many times. In a playlist, this track functions as a palate cleanser after something emotional or dramatic. It brings the focus back to the present: the body, the beat, the directness of a simple statement. It’s also a useful track for anyone who likes music with attitude that doesn’t require lore. The title is the lore.\u2028Listen: https://open.spotify.com/track/0dzRTayCu78PbPWXvuaDSv","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}