Play Public Instance
Information about plays
list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID
GET /v2/plays/3591607/?format=api
{ "id": 3591607, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3591607/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-15T21:53:00-08:00", "show": 65389, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65389/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Pienso en ti", "track_id": null, "recording_id": null, "artist": "Los Flakos", "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": "Pienso en ti is a title that doesn’t need metaphor—it’s already the whole story: “I think of you.” The power of songs built on that phrase is how they turn repetition into proof. Thinking of someone is not an event; it’s a loop. The song works best when you let it live inside that loop—small variations in feeling, the way memory shifts across the day, the mix of sweetness and irritation that comes from not being able to control your own attention. Tracks like this often succeed because they don’t pretend love is clean. Thinking of you can be devotion, regret, nostalgia, temptation, or self-punishment. The music can carry all those possibilities depending on how it’s arranged and delivered: a tender melody can feel like comfort, while the same melody repeated can feel like a trap. In a playlist, Pienso en ti is a humanizing moment—simple language, direct sentiment, and emotional accessibility. It’s ideal for the section of a sequence where you want the listener to soften without falling asleep.\u2028Listen: https://open.spotify.com/search/Los%20Flakos%20Pienso%20en%20ti", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }