{"id":3594973,"uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3594973/?format=json","airdate":"2025-12-23T16:54:08-08:00","show":65458,"show_uri":"https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65458/?format=json","image_uri":"","thumbnail_uri":"","song":"Look Inside","track_id":"a41d899a-dfeb-4c0f-a795-66956efaa508","recording_id":"3baf0b7b-ec2f-4fee-9e8d-419a313e77cc","artist":"Mt Fog","artist_ids":["9394e43d-1b94-4dc9-8957-c63ccf124edb"],"album":"Look Inside","release_id":"ae4b6439-f395-40a3-b4d0-034fe08630d4","release_group_id":"835b9b02-4ecf-4752-b984-4ef74dc39aee","labels":["Save the Forest for the Trees"],"label_ids":["f0e8cc7b-40c3-4686-88e5-c27902e11c2b"],"release_date":"2025-12-12","rotation_status":"Light","is_local":false,"is_request":false,"is_live":false,"comment":"New music from Seattle's Mt Fog\n___\nIn his column Throwaway Style, Martin Douglas writes, \"Once the music-making pseudonym of classically trained virtuoso Carolyn B., Mt. Fog has become a full-fledged band, rounded out by drummer Andy Sells and bassist Casey Rosebridge. A closeness exists between the three which belies the tried-and-true method of an accomplished solo artist enlisting hired guns; in conversation, Rosebridge half-jokes that the band has been mistaken for a throuple.\n\n\"On a purely musical level, Mt. Fog exists as somewhat of an anomaly in Seattle’s contemporary music scene. (That’s not to say they are the only band that fits the bill; there are a handful of notable exceptions to this rule.) In a vast and endless sea of rock bands—ranging in quality from adequate-but-dull to legitimately great—Mt. Fog lies in the space between classical and the modernist avant-garde; mostly devoid of six-string guitars and standard song structure; containing old-world mysticism and something far beyond the present day in the opposite direction.\" https://tinyurl.com/bdfre76p","location":1,"location_name":"Default","play_type":"trackplay"}