Information about plays

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

GET /v2/plays/3613817/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 3613817,
    "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3613817/?format=api",
    "airdate": "2026-02-06T05:15:03-08:00",
    "show": 65852,
    "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65852/?format=api",
    "image_uri": "https://ia600502.us.archive.org/8/items/mbid-bd75a130-7ee1-4b68-940b-592b5f21c605/mbid-bd75a130-7ee1-4b68-940b-592b5f21c605-11523292523_thumb500.jpg",
    "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia600502.us.archive.org/8/items/mbid-bd75a130-7ee1-4b68-940b-592b5f21c605/mbid-bd75a130-7ee1-4b68-940b-592b5f21c605-11523292523_thumb250.jpg",
    "song": "The Crooked Beat",
    "track_id": "313fd48d-637f-3253-9cc4-b6bee9bd1130",
    "recording_id": "09f33271-84e1-4b76-96bb-11007d68dae1",
    "artist": "The Clash",
    "artist_ids": [
        "8f92558c-2baa-4758-8c38-615519e9deda"
    ],
    "album": "Sandinista!",
    "release_id": "bd75a130-7ee1-4b68-940b-592b5f21c605",
    "release_group_id": "ff729e76-b7c5-3877-bf7d-bbad4fde43cb",
    "labels": [
        "Epic"
    ],
    "label_ids": [
        "8f638ddb-131a-4cc3-b3d4-7ebdac201b55"
    ],
    "release_date": "1999-01-01",
    "rotation_status": null,
    "is_local": false,
    "is_request": false,
    "is_live": false,
    "comment": "“The Crooked Beat” spotlights Paul Simonon—the Brixton kid whose reggae obsession is a huge part of why The Clash sound like The Clash at all. It’s his second lead vocal after “The Guns of Brixton,” and again he drags the band deep into dubby, woozy territory that’s worlds away from straight three‑chord punk.\nOn Sandinista! it plays like a little Brixton short story: kids sneaking out from tower blocks to find a sound system that can “take the pressure off,” while cops prowl the “crooked beat” outside. That tension—between state pressure and a DIY, immigrant‑driven culture built around bass, drums, and community—might be the most International Clash Day thing ever: the band using Jamaican rhythm and street‑level detail to argue that the dance floor is where you resist, not escape.\n\nThe title of The Clash's \"Sandinista!\" refers to the Sandinista National Liberation Front in Nicaragua.",
    "location": 1,
    "location_name": "Default",
    "play_type": "trackplay"
}