Information about plays

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

GET /v2/plays/?format=api&offset=117860&ordering=-airdate
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
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    "previous": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/?format=api&limit=20&offset=117840&ordering=-airdate",
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        {
            "id": 3440030,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440030/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:43:20-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://ia601402.us.archive.org/15/items/mbid-9f37f488-ac5f-4fb7-a071-1f1708cec4a8/mbid-9f37f488-ac5f-4fb7-a071-1f1708cec4a8-40572844752_thumb500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia801402.us.archive.org/15/items/mbid-9f37f488-ac5f-4fb7-a071-1f1708cec4a8/mbid-9f37f488-ac5f-4fb7-a071-1f1708cec4a8-40572844752_thumb250.jpg",
            "song": "Any Signs of Love",
            "track_id": "d5a2c199-1c46-425b-b355-ec139a11e38d",
            "recording_id": "d9f60eb6-1e28-45d5-8662-7da1f7617977",
            "artist": "Crazy P",
            "artist_ids": [
                "45644225-982e-4b76-a529-d8f9688e9a7d"
            ],
            "album": "Any Signs of Love",
            "release_id": "9f37f488-ac5f-4fb7-a071-1f1708cec4a8",
            "release_group_id": "6abe2668-9f60-455b-bd34-8705108114d6",
            "labels": [
                "Walk Don't Walk Limited"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "cdb7e5fb-2059-4ca3-8d27-0baec83f1fd5"
            ],
            "release_date": "2024-11-29",
            "rotation_status": "Medium",
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Danielle Moore, lead singer and frontwoman of the electronic group Crazy P, died in August at the age of 52. \n\nThe group wrote: “We cannot believe the news ourselves and we know it will be the same for all of you. She gave us so much and we love her so much. Our hearts are broken. We need time to process that this has happened. Danielle lived a life driven by love, compassion, community and music. She lived the biggest of lives. We will miss her with all our hearts.”\n\nAccording to an article from The Guardian on Moore’s passing: “Chris Todd and Jim Baron founded the house and disco outfit Crazy P – originally known as Crazy Penis – while at university in Nottingham in the mid-90s and were signed by Manchester label Paper Recordings. Moore was part of an expansion of the group in 2002, alongside bassist Tim Davies and percussionist Mav Kendricks. They released seven studio albums and more remix albums.”\n\nAlong with her work with Crazy P, Moore also worked as a solo DJ, according to The Guardian.",
            "location": 1,
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        },
        {
            "id": 3440031,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440031/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:42:12-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "",
            "thumbnail_uri": "",
            "comment": "",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "airbreak"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440029,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440029/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:38:34-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "",
            "thumbnail_uri": "",
            "song": "The Opera House",
            "track_id": null,
            "recording_id": "1a90e378-ed96-485d-a96d-51023e315002",
            "artist": "The Olivia Tremor Control",
            "artist_ids": [
                "d62842be-03d8-414b-a8d6-36f4b3b563ed"
            ],
            "album": "The Opera House",
            "release_id": null,
            "release_group_id": "d520d8bc-7b49-349f-bbc8-daab08647da4",
            "labels": [
                "The Blue Rose Record Company"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "baa69830-581f-4ad1-947f-e2bae53489e4"
            ],
            "release_date": "1996-01-01",
            "rotation_status": null,
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Will Cullen Hart, a founding member of the musical collective Elephant 6 along with bands Olivia Tremor Control and Circulatory System, died, age 53.\n\nThe musician died on Friday (November 29) from natural causes, as confirmed in a Facebook post from the Apples in Stereo frontman Robert Schneider. His death coincided with the release date of two new Olivia Tremor Control singles ‘Garden Of Light’ and ‘The Same Place’, their first new music in 13 years.\n\nHe was born on June 14, 1971 in Ruston, Louisiana. His parents, both interior designers, divorced and moved around the country, leading Hart to spend parts of his childhood in Alabama, Colorado, and Texas before returning to Ruston in ninth grade. Among his friends there were future Elephant 6 collaborators Bill Doss, Jeff Mangum (later of Neutral Milk Hotel)  and Robert Schneider. \n\nSchneider wrote, \n\n“Will … was energetic, sweet, tender, earnest, alternately totally chill and totally explosive. Will suffered from multiple sclerosis for almost two decades, which gradually reduced his mobility, his ability to play guitar, and his ability to tour – but he kept up his productivity…and lived life in a state of heightened creativity. He was infinitely loved by me, and by his bandmates and the Elephant 6 and Athens communities. Today is a day of victory for W. Cullen Hart – his last day represented a triumph. Today is the day that Will’s perseverance, his sincerity, his struggle with MS, and his devotion to Bill and their common vision, bears fruit.”",
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        {
            "id": 3440027,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440027/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:37:14-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/23ef3d13-f8ce-4bac-830b-9ff1e18beb5f/2073556232-500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/23ef3d13-f8ce-4bac-830b-9ff1e18beb5f/2073556232-250.jpg",
            "song": "Jeopardy",
            "track_id": null,
            "recording_id": "1144a925-c614-45dc-b4a4-5971f700ecf2",
            "artist": "Greg Kihn Band",
            "artist_ids": [
                "67f54f43-b549-4efc-a812-70471082412c"
            ],
            "album": "Kihnspiracy",
            "release_id": null,
            "release_group_id": "f2ed435e-69e8-38a6-afc4-e3ff4fb590c7",
            "labels": [
                "Castle Communications"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "f3acf224-8e44-49a1-a3a1-6ed1ea5f5016"
            ],
            "release_date": "1983-01-01",
            "rotation_status": null,
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Greg Kihn, a rock and roll musician best known for his ‘80s hit songs “Jeopardy” and “The Breakup Song,” has died.\n\nKihn died of Alzheimer’s disease on Tuesday, his management team said in a statement posted to Kihn’s website. He was 75.\n\nHe was born on July 10, 1949, in Baltimore and started writing songs and playing coffee houses while still in high school in the Baltimore area. When Kihn was 17, his mother submitted a tape of one of his original songs to the talent contest of the big local Top 40 radio station WCAO, in which he took first prize and won three things that would change his life: a typewriter, a stack of records, and a Vox electric guitar.\n\nKihn moved to the San Francisco area in the 1970s and later signed to Beserkley Records. With a songwriting style that blended folk, classic rock, blues and pop, his Greg Kihn Band had their first hit with “The Breakup Song,” released in 1981.\n\nIn 1983, the band’s song “Jeopardy” rose to No. 2 on the Billboard HOT 100 songs chart behind Michael Jackson’s “Beat It.” \n\n“Weird Al” Yankovic did a parody of the “Jeopardy” song in the ‘80s called “I Lost on Jeopardy.” Kihn authorized Yankovic to make the spoof under the condition he could participate; which was seen at the end of Yankovic's music video where Yankovic is tossed into a convertible, revealing Kihn to be the driver.\n\nFrom 1996 through 2012, Kihn was a morning radio disc jockey for KUFX, a Bay Area classic rock radio station.",
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        },
        {
            "id": 3440025,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440025/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:31:05-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
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            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "airbreak"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440024,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440024/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:28:37-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://ia801402.us.archive.org/6/items/mbid-9165ac0d-cb71-4419-ab57-2d46e7c4d5c0/mbid-9165ac0d-cb71-4419-ab57-2d46e7c4d5c0-33791350234_thumb500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia601402.us.archive.org/6/items/mbid-9165ac0d-cb71-4419-ab57-2d46e7c4d5c0/mbid-9165ac0d-cb71-4419-ab57-2d46e7c4d5c0-33791350234_thumb250.jpg",
            "song": "Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)",
            "track_id": "4c5c6a31-a148-4080-82cd-c4d55501e1ec",
            "recording_id": "96e25e14-65be-47bb-971a-be6fd28c741f",
            "artist": "Frank Sinatra & Count Basie",
            "artist_ids": [
                "197450cd-0124-4164-b723-3c22dd16494d",
                "0dbd6300-efdc-420b-857e-895e18fad317"
            ],
            "album": "It Might as Well Be Swing",
            "release_id": "9165ac0d-cb71-4419-ab57-2d46e7c4d5c0",
            "release_group_id": "80c2bb42-0c5e-35ed-8c63-392da06d5983",
            "labels": [
                "Reprise Records"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "af6d6f49-2b4d-40fe-86d4-241906772b59"
            ],
            "release_date": "1964-12-19",
            "rotation_status": "Library",
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "This iconic version of Fly Me to the Moon was arranged by Quincy Jones. Among other contributions to the arrangement Jones raised the tempo and moved the song form 3/4 to 4/4 time.",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
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        },
        {
            "id": 3440023,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440023/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:26:01-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://ia801207.us.archive.org/18/items/mbid-64ba0d61-cb2f-40ab-8837-dca3fcea7a5e/mbid-64ba0d61-cb2f-40ab-8837-dca3fcea7a5e-14066158991_thumb500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia601207.us.archive.org/18/items/mbid-64ba0d61-cb2f-40ab-8837-dca3fcea7a5e/mbid-64ba0d61-cb2f-40ab-8837-dca3fcea7a5e-14066158991_thumb250.jpg",
            "song": "Soul Bossa Nova",
            "track_id": "1aabdcb7-07b6-3776-b7bb-b7029a6a2711",
            "recording_id": "4ef8d93a-ba54-4a4d-a15c-5d025d866340",
            "artist": "Quincy Jones",
            "artist_ids": [
                "5803c81e-739a-4057-9a5c-cf84e55db630"
            ],
            "album": "Big Band Bossa Nova",
            "release_id": "64ba0d61-cb2f-40ab-8837-dca3fcea7a5e",
            "release_group_id": "c00632c9-c7fd-3b30-b982-f345750b7615",
            "labels": [
                "Mercury Records"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "995428e7-81b6-41dd-bd38-5a7a0ece8ad6"
            ],
            "release_date": "1962-12-19",
            "rotation_status": "Library",
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Quincy Jones died on November 3rd at 91. \n\nQuincy Jones (born Quincy Delight, Jr.), was born in Chicago in 1933 and moved to Bremerton, WA when he was 10 years old because his father got a wartime job at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. After the war, his family later relocated to Seattle where Quincy attended Garfield High School. At Garfield, in 1947, he joined his first swing band, started by his friend Charlie Taylor and they backed Billie Holiday! By his mid-20’s he was touring with his own band. He then went on to become a record producer, songwriter, composer, and arranger. His career spanned 70 years with 28 Grammy awards! He worked with everyone form Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson.",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "trackplay"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440022,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440022/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:23:28-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://ia600208.us.archive.org/26/items/mbid-5a1b5b26-0f31-4566-bed4-0ca8ed987366/mbid-5a1b5b26-0f31-4566-bed4-0ca8ed987366-1407441400_thumb500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia800208.us.archive.org/26/items/mbid-5a1b5b26-0f31-4566-bed4-0ca8ed987366/mbid-5a1b5b26-0f31-4566-bed4-0ca8ed987366-1407441400_thumb250.jpg",
            "song": "Kick Out the Jams",
            "track_id": "b1dc7357-72cd-35d4-9994-f2875f6360de",
            "recording_id": "35ae913f-b65a-4b57-b744-397c539b9a04",
            "artist": "MC5",
            "artist_ids": [
                "08b736bb-1c82-40b4-8b0b-49e2182a067a"
            ],
            "album": "Kick Out the Jams",
            "release_id": "5a1b5b26-0f31-4566-bed4-0ca8ed987366",
            "release_group_id": "44410403-45d3-30fa-ba48-d16664bf6fb3",
            "labels": [
                "Elektra"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "873f9f75-af68-4872-98e2-431058e4c9a9"
            ],
            "release_date": "1969-12-19",
            "rotation_status": "Library",
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Along with MC5 drummer Dennis \"Machine Gun\" Thompson, we lost Wayne Kramer founding member of MC5 passed away on Februarys 2nd 2024 at the age of 75. \n\nAs a teenager, Kramer, alongside friend Fred “Sonic” Smith, co-founded the iconic band MC5, which stood for Motor City Five, in the mid-Sixties.\nMC5 rose to prominence as the house band at Detroit’s Grande Ballroom in 1967. John Sinclair, a left-wing activist, became the band’s manager, and the group aligned itself with the White Panther Party and adopted a politically charged stance. Their live performances, notably at the 1968 Democratic National Convention protests, solidified their reputation as a fierce and influential act.\nIn 1969, after the band signed to Elektra, Kramer and company returned to Detroit and its Grande Ballroom to record what would become their hit debut album “Kick Out the Jams.”\nThe band’s distorted brand of grunge rock and the live LP’s rallying cry of “Kick out the jams, motherfuckers,” made the group quite controversial.\n\nhttps://nypost.com/2024/02/02/entertainment/wayne-kramer-dead-mc5-co-founder-and-activist-was-75/",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "trackplay"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440021,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440021/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:20:46-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/d3703d00-57f5-40e2-9608-a3fe69285d17/15626846586-500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/d3703d00-57f5-40e2-9608-a3fe69285d17/15626846586-250.jpg",
            "song": "Happy Together",
            "track_id": null,
            "recording_id": "efd1ebac-6519-4a8b-9556-4f050f080cfa",
            "artist": "The Turtles",
            "artist_ids": [
                "335b6182-0da8-4dc6-a5ec-fe13f0f87e4b"
            ],
            "album": "Happy Together",
            "release_id": null,
            "release_group_id": "ba3303f2-3b80-4379-a7c8-801407e7eec0",
            "labels": [
                "White Whale"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "2f113261-15d5-4925-892c-d3a8161b0fe7"
            ],
            "release_date": "1966-01-01",
            "rotation_status": null,
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "John Barbata died on May 8th of this year at the age of 79. Born in New Jersey in 1945, Barbata was an iconic drummer performing with the Turtles, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, as well was Jefferson Airplane and  Jefferson Starship.",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "trackplay"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440019,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440019/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:17:18-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://ia803105.us.archive.org/31/items/mbid-5a2cf986-369c-4d12-a628-451f127f2903/mbid-5a2cf986-369c-4d12-a628-451f127f2903-24752952576_thumb500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia803105.us.archive.org/31/items/mbid-5a2cf986-369c-4d12-a628-451f127f2903/mbid-5a2cf986-369c-4d12-a628-451f127f2903-24752952576_thumb250.jpg",
            "song": "Heavenly Pop Hit",
            "track_id": "ba9eee5e-dbac-3829-aadc-cc5db38bd53d",
            "recording_id": "8f6ac58e-a761-423c-a70b-f6ce267eebca",
            "artist": "The Chills",
            "artist_ids": [
                "90b5813d-fbd7-4539-89d5-034094f64a2e"
            ],
            "album": "Submarine Bells",
            "release_id": "5a2cf986-369c-4d12-a628-451f127f2903",
            "release_group_id": "8540adb4-e189-339f-9904-c2f8a91d9b40",
            "labels": [
                "Slash"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "490afeef-44aa-4bba-b5d7-df875609957f"
            ],
            "release_date": "1990-12-19",
            "rotation_status": null,
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Martin Phillipps, founding guitarist of New Zealand jangle-pop icons the Chills, has died. He was 61.\n\nNo cause of death has been released but a 2019 documentary called The Chills: The Triumph & Tragedy of Martin Phillipps touched on his life-threatening brush with hepatitis C in the 1990s and subsequent liver failure. The Otago Daily Times reported Phillipps was recently admitted to Dunedin Hospital with liver problems.\n\nThe guitarist formed the Chills in Dunedin, New Zealand in 1980. The group soon signed to Flying Nun, and their debut album Brave Words arrived in 1987, and its follow-up Submarine Bells reached #1 on the New Zealand album charts.\n\nThe Chills  went on to release a total of seven studio albums, their most recent being 2021’s Scatterbrain.\n\nThe band was at the forefront of a psychedelic jangly type of music known as “the Dunedin sound” alongside bands like The Bats, The Clean, Verlaines, Straightjacket Fits and more.\n\nThe Dunedin sound influenced many bands, including American indie rock groups R.E.M., Yo La Tengo, Mudhoney, and Pavement. \n\nThe Chills came to KEXP in March of 2019 and played a live session on the Midday Show with Cheryl Waters. \n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMErPIgu8cc",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "trackplay"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440018,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440018/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:13:23-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "",
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            "comment": "",
            "location": 1,
            "location_name": "Default",
            "play_type": "airbreak"
        },
        {
            "id": 3440017,
            "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3440017/?format=api",
            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:11:05-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
            "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/62149/?format=api",
            "image_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/ae83fa53-9739-4679-aa41-e9bf46122ece/8091543965-500.jpg",
            "thumbnail_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/ae83fa53-9739-4679-aa41-e9bf46122ece/8091543965-250.jpg",
            "song": "Reach Out I’ll Be There",
            "track_id": null,
            "recording_id": "1744a4ba-a8fd-4701-adce-39db6397491f",
            "artist": "Four Tops",
            "artist_ids": [
                "0d21b01f-21f2-419b-8d98-4158ba0c0aa4"
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            "album": "Reach Out",
            "release_id": null,
            "release_group_id": "6fdc3cfa-7bac-3b19-aa87-94947ef40ffa",
            "labels": [
                "Motown"
            ],
            "label_ids": [
                "8e479e57-ef44-490c-b75d-cd28df89bf1b"
            ],
            "release_date": "1967-07-01",
            "rotation_status": null,
            "is_local": false,
            "is_request": false,
            "is_live": false,
            "comment": "Abdul Kareem Fakir, professionally known as Duke Fakir, passed away, July 22nd at 88. He was the last surviving member of the Motown quartet the Four Tops. Check out this article by The New York Times, which profiles his life and remembers his legacy, here:\nhttps://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/22/arts/music/abdul-duke-fakir-dead.html\n---\n\"Reach Out (I'll Be There)\" comes from Four Tops' fourth studio album \"Reach Out\" (1967). Written and produced by Motown's main production team, Holland–Dozier–Holland, the song is one of the best known Motown tunes of the 60s, and is now considered their signature song.",
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            "song": "I’ll Be Around",
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            "comment": "Baritone singer Henry Fambrough, the last original member of the Spinners, died at age 85 on February 5th 2024. \n\nAn Army veteran, Fambrough was known for his iconic “handlebar” mustache, captivating audiences with his smooth moves onstage. His euphonious baritone voice is featured prominently on standout Spinners singles, album cuts, and B-sides such as “Ghetto Child,” “I Don’t Want To Lose You,” and “Just As Long As We Have Love.”\n\nThe Spinners formed in 1954 in Ferndale, Michigan as the Domingoes before changing their name to the Spinners. Fambrough was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1961, and on his return two years later, the Spinners signed to Motown Records but did not have hits for the next six years, so Fambrough worked as a chauffeur for the mother of label boss Berry Gordy Jr.\n\nAfter leaving Motown for Atlantic Records, The Spinners joined forces with producer Thomas Bell and landed hits with classics like “I’ll Be Around, “Could It Be I’m Falling In Love,” “One Of A Kind (Love Affair),” and “Ghetto Child”.\n\nFambrough is survived by his wife of 52 years, Norma, daughter Heather Williams.",
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            "airdate": "2024-12-19T09:02:35-08:00",
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            "comment": "One of Phil Lesh's most famous contributions to the Grateful Dead's catalog, with lyrics form long time Dead lyricist Robert Hunter.",
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            "airdate": "2024-12-19T08:59:39-08:00",
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            "airdate": "2024-12-19T08:55:43-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
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            "song": "Scarlet Begonias",
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            "album": "From the Mars Hotel",
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            "comment": "Phil Lesh, the founding bassist for the Grateful Dead, passed away on Oct. 25, 2024, at the age of 84, according to a post on his social media. \n\nThe post read: “Phil Lesh, bassist and founding member of The Grateful Dead, passed peacefully this morning. He was surrounded by his family and full of love. Phil brought immense joy to everyone around him and leaves behind a legacy of music and love. We request that you respect the Lesh family’s privacy at this time.”\n\nLesh was part of the Dead in its earliest form – as The Warlocks. After The Grateful Dead dissolved in 1995 following the death of lead guitarist Jerry Garcia, Lesh continued making music with former band members in different iterations of Phil Lesh and Friends.\n\nHe was born in Berkeley, CA. In 1940, Lesh met Garcia at a Bay Area house party. They met again after a 1964 Warlocks gig in Hayward, CA, and Garcia invited him to join the band.\n\n“Box of Rain” and “Unbroken Chain” were among the most popular songs that Lesh wrote for the Grateful Dead. He also contributed to the four-part harmonies on ‘Workingman’s Dead’ and ‘American Beauty.’\n\nIn 2012, Lesh and his wife Jill opened Terrapin Crossroads, a restaurant and venue in San Rafael, CA. \n\nIn 1998, Lesh received a liver transplant after contracting hepatitis C decades earlier. He survived prostate cancer in 2006. He revealed in 2015 that he had contracted bladder cancer.",
            "location": 1,
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        {
            "id": 3440011,
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            "airdate": "2024-12-19T08:50:50-08:00",
            "show": 62149,
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            "song": "Head Like a Hole",
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            "artist": "Nine Inch Nails",
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            "comment": "Keith LeBlanc produced Head Like a Hole in collaboration with Trent Reznor as well as several other songs on Nine Inch Nails debut record.",
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            "airdate": "2024-12-19T08:46:34-08:00",
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            "comment": "Turn You Inside-Out features percussion from Keith LeBlanc. \n\nThe main guitar riff in this track is an inversion of the one used in their track \"Finest Worksong\".",
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