Play Public List
Information about plays
list: List of plays
retrieve: Information about a specific play by ID
GET /v2/plays/?format=api&offset=62840&ordering=-airdate
{ "next": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/?format=api&limit=20&offset=62860&ordering=-airdate", "previous": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/?format=api&limit=20&offset=62820&ordering=-airdate", "results": [ { "id": 3592634, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592634/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:35:25-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "https://ia800206.us.archive.org/17/items/mbid-7dbf3ed6-7927-3f35-adc2-3b46b97eca60/mbid-7dbf3ed6-7927-3f35-adc2-3b46b97eca60-4839084652_thumb500.jpg", "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia800206.us.archive.org/17/items/mbid-7dbf3ed6-7927-3f35-adc2-3b46b97eca60/mbid-7dbf3ed6-7927-3f35-adc2-3b46b97eca60-4839084652_thumb250.jpg", "song": "Feel Like Makin' Love", "track_id": "9d2e74cc-1c32-3c49-b340-77731bf4a112", "recording_id": "42599043-6404-4c06-bd5b-2b58e89e99ac", "artist": "D’Angelo", "artist_ids": [ "b66771cc-45fa-4a32-b14f-5337d7223d7a" ], "album": "Voodoo", "release_id": "7dbf3ed6-7927-3f35-adc2-3b46b97eca60", "release_group_id": "9605c075-c64c-366b-ad7f-ec98523fc162", "labels": [ "EMI" ], "label_ids": [ "c029628b-6633-439e-bcee-ed02e8a338f7" ], "release_date": "2000-01-25", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP D'Angelo, who passed away October 14 at age 51.\n\nFrom his family: \"The shining star of our family has dimmed his light for us in this life… After a prolonged and courageous battle with cancer, we are heartbroken to announce that Michael D'Angelo Archer, known to his fans around the world as D'Angelo, has been called home, departing this life today, October 14th, 2025,\"\n___\nD'Angelo's second album \"Voodoo\" won the 2001 Grammy for R&B Album, for his song \"Untitled (How Does It Feel)\".", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592633, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592633/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:33:14-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Feel Like Makin' Love", "track_id": "06613e53-7056-39fb-be7e-60c72dcbec47", "recording_id": "5fd6b5e7-3c7c-454a-9975-9b4d61eb9e0a", "artist": "Roberta Flack", "artist_ids": [ "5298bbcb-7330-49bf-a780-2d757f10a20a" ], "album": "Atlantic Rhythm and Blues 1947-1974, Volume 7: 1969-1974", "release_id": "46b9c433-fe2a-46bd-88c9-7976dcc0e545", "release_group_id": "0568211f-79d0-48ba-8911-f1c15b0ff76a", "labels": [ "Atlantic" ], "label_ids": [ "50c384a2-0b44-401b-b893-8181173339c7" ], "release_date": "1990-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP Roberta Flack, who we lost on February 24th at 88. She had been battling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).\n\nShe had grown up in Northern Virginia and learned to play piano and sing in church. Flack won a scholarship to Howard University when she was 15, with plans to become a concert pianist.\n\nShe would go onto become one of the most important and beloved singers of the 1970s.", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592632, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592632/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:28:18-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Feel Like Makin’ Love", "track_id": "96b39f0a-fa6f-41a7-8b25-568ca6b26aff", "recording_id": "afb58df6-746e-43ba-bf90-8793a057022c", "artist": "Bad Company", "artist_ids": [ "0053dbd9-bfbc-4e38-9f08-66a27d914c38" ], "album": "Straight Shooter", "release_id": "dd85e531-0c5e-4e06-bf57-eb809c7ee092", "release_group_id": "2c04157b-3213-34ba-b21c-3865facf20ac", "labels": [ "Island" ], "label_ids": [ "dfd92cd3-4888-46d2-b968-328b1feb2642" ], "release_date": "1975-01-01", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "Ralphs left Mott the Hoople in 1973 and soon formed Bad Company with Paul Rodgers, a singer who had left his own band, Free.\n\nBad Company’s self-titled debut album went to No. 1 on Billboard’s album chart. And Ralphs’ “Can’t Get Enough” would be their biggest hit single, peaking at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100.\n\n“We actually did the whole thing in one take live,” Ralphs said in the Gibson interview. “It wasn’t perfect, but we just said, ‘Yeah, that’s great, it’s going to capture the moment.’ That’s what I like to do in recording. It doesn’t have to be perfect as long as it captures the moment. That’s what it’s all about.”\n\nBad Company’s 1975 follow-up, “Straight Shooter,” was also a hit, going to No. 3 on album charts and featured one of their biggest hits, “Feel Like Makin’ Love.”", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592631, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592631/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:25:28-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "All the Young Dudes", "track_id": "d8988c9a-7962-338f-8122-6261c4e9f511", "recording_id": "b78040da-5ebd-40be-8bb0-f6efb0f284da", "artist": "Mott the Hoople", "artist_ids": [ "435f1441-0f43-479d-92db-a506449a686b" ], "album": "Greatest Hits", "release_id": "656f52a0-176c-43db-b86f-90d053e44d7a", "release_group_id": "de1bcca7-211f-3a91-b054-eca3de149648", "labels": [], "label_ids": [], "release_date": "2003-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "Mick Ralphs, the founder and guitarist of Mott the Hoople and the Bad Company, died July 23rd at 81. \n\n The cause of his death has not been disclosed, but in 2016 he suffered a severe stroke. \n\nThe group’s self-titled first album, recorded in a week, won a cult following, but the two that followed were critical and financial flops. They finally found success with the 1972 David Bowie-penned-and-produced song “All the Young Dudes.”", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592630, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592630/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:22:02-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "comment": "", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "airbreak" }, { "id": 3592629, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592629/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:19:20-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Treat Me Like a Saturday Night", "track_id": "1c80ddb3-6c15-3966-a0b1-2292d1834695", "recording_id": "93bc08fc-0dac-459a-97f0-b388b792749b", "artist": "Joe Ely", "artist_ids": [ "4682ba8c-e15d-4543-9747-c72860392c76" ], "album": "Joe Ely", "release_id": "a95f7b10-d687-49b7-a0ee-084b624fb980", "release_group_id": "431252ba-fd8b-3a3f-9254-75f91d155a4f", "labels": [ "CBUJ Entertainment" ], "label_ids": [ "79566a9e-e162-448f-9d8f-142021c3f775" ], "release_date": "2007-06-12", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "Joe Ely died from complications of Lewy body dementia, Parkinson's, and pneumonia. At the time of his death, Ely’s \"beloved\" wife Sharon, whom he married in 1983, and daughter Marie were at his side at their home in Taos, New Mexico.\nhttps://people.com/joe-ely-dead-age-78-progressive-texas-country-legend-11870191", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592627, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592627/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:14:33-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "https://ia800605.us.archive.org/30/items/mbid-6ba69526-3526-31b0-9337-bc328ad1b679/mbid-6ba69526-3526-31b0-9337-bc328ad1b679-10309070536_thumb500.jpg", "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia800605.us.archive.org/30/items/mbid-6ba69526-3526-31b0-9337-bc328ad1b679/mbid-6ba69526-3526-31b0-9337-bc328ad1b679-10309070536_thumb250.jpg", "song": "Should I Stay or Should I Go", "track_id": "d2a4d112-d4dc-33ec-9cc6-a838d6899ccd", "recording_id": "c0895694-06e3-49b9-a5ac-2b6cc1098bb2", "artist": "The Clash", "artist_ids": [ "8f92558c-2baa-4758-8c38-615519e9deda" ], "album": "Combat Rock", "release_id": "6ba69526-3526-31b0-9337-bc328ad1b679", "release_group_id": "b1907b62-6aaf-3ea4-9895-b71234a0e5c1", "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": "RIP Joe Ely, who died on December 15 at 78.\n\nThe Flatlanders guitarist toured regularly with Bruce Springsteen and The Clash. \n\nSinging the Spanish parts with Joe Strummer was Joe Ely, a Texas singer whose 1978 album \"Honky Tonk Masquerade\" got the attention of The Clash when they heard it in England.", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592626, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592626/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:12:24-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Mary Tyler Moore", "track_id": "493d16cb-bd64-3a1b-8602-8eec815b9630", "recording_id": "f5bdad33-cd0f-4536-8b95-3d77b9fff6bb", "artist": "Sonny Curtis", "artist_ids": [ "3d01cbe9-b68a-461e-9221-25bd2448ec6f" ], "album": "Television’s Greatest Hits, Volume 2: More From the 50’s & 60’s", "release_id": "b032720a-2f44-41ed-a50e-f1d3fb92813f", "release_group_id": "d0d06931-9228-3bb6-afd5-094bc4b7dfe4", "labels": [ "TVT Soundtrax" ], "label_ids": [ "834f2d34-a72f-4af3-b5bc-9e5b9d3d16c8" ], "release_date": "1986-01-01", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "Sonny Curtis died on September 19th from pneumonia. RIP.\n\nCurtis's best known compositions include \"Walk Right Back\", a major hit in 1961 for the Everly Brothers; \"I Fought the Law\", notably covered by the Bobby Fuller Four, the Clash, and Green Day; \"Love is All Around\", the theme song for The Mary Tyler Moore Show; \"More Than I Can Say\", co-written with The Crickets' drummer Jerry Allison and a hit for Leo Sayer in 1980.", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592625, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592625/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:10:16-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "I Fought the Law", "track_id": "1fd01f38-1ee3-3a7c-b185-ad9cd233b4ac", "recording_id": "46dae522-3e9b-4749-9b9b-72f55e2be73d", "artist": "The Crickets", "artist_ids": [ "de9a19b3-531b-4df3-ae90-4763fe282946" ], "album": "In Style With the Crickets", "release_id": "ba665803-73ca-4587-9636-96d6dd64c2fb", "release_group_id": "3706b7a9-3204-30f5-be42-7f88863b4b43", "labels": [ "Coral Records" ], "label_ids": [ "17060be5-22eb-49ff-90f3-da766d41812f" ], "release_date": "1960-12-05", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP Sonny Curtis, who died at 88 from pneumonia at a hospital Nashville, TN.\n\nCurtis was born on May 9, 1937 in Meadow, a tiny town in West Texas. Known for his collaborations with Buddy Holly, he was a member of the Crickets and continued with the band after Holly's death. He is a member of 3 music Halls of Fame including the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame.", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592624, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592624/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:05:33-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "comment": "", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "airbreak" }, { "id": 3592623, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592623/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T09:01:31-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Jungle Love", "track_id": "7137bb76-5021-44e8-beaa-1a2979a55e78", "recording_id": "e39e2a63-b421-4853-82c5-49aec5a9458f", "artist": "The Time", "artist_ids": [ "3bfa8f23-2dbb-43e2-b1da-3cfaa6c5ff9d" ], "album": "Ice Cream Castle", "release_id": "d8014811-055d-4131-bc19-878d6034368f", "release_group_id": "7bcad944-a741-32ad-b387-8489c8b4b9ac", "labels": [ "Warner Bros. Records" ], "label_ids": [ "c595c289-47ce-4fba-b999-b87503e8cb71" ], "release_date": "1984-01-01", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "\"Jellybean\" Johnson, drummer of Minneapolis funk band The Time, died at 69 on November 21st.\n\nOn Wednesday, Nov. 19, Johnson shared a message to mark his 69th birthday and to garner support for his latest project, the Minneapolis Sound Museum, ”As I approach this birthday, I've been asking myself what legacy really means. What do I want to leave behind? What do I want people — especially our young people — to know? And the truth is simple: I want our story protected. I want our community honored. I want the next generation to have what we had: access, opportunity, and a place to belong.”", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592622, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592622/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:58:45-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "New York Groove", "track_id": "abe6f219-7476-4905-970b-b352503ad3ef", "recording_id": "2fb8c627-4368-4b29-ba35-18bcc808e27a", "artist": "Ace Frehley", "artist_ids": [ "33d700ce-064f-44f6-ab9e-60f9eed0fca1" ], "album": "Ace Frehley", "release_id": "43147e58-bda8-409c-98c0-26913f02b83d", "release_group_id": "30a17c90-6537-3cbb-8458-fe8e90933210", "labels": [ "Casablanca Record and FilmWorks" ], "label_ids": [ "68be9da2-16a7-4617-8444-b2b763683cf2" ], "release_date": "1978-09-18", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "Ace Frehely, a founding member of KISS, died on Nov. 10 at 74.\n\nFrehley was hospitalized weeks ago after falling in his studio. Frehley was with Kiss from 1973 to 1982, and wrote some of their biggest hits including “Cold Gin,” and “Shock Me.” He later returned for the band’s blockbuster reunion tour in 1996.", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592621, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592621/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:56:09-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "https://ia801302.us.archive.org/2/items/mbid-1f6cc992-e572-4f3c-b62a-cb6111383e67/mbid-1f6cc992-e572-4f3c-b62a-cb6111383e67-11570630075_thumb500.jpg", "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia601302.us.archive.org/2/items/mbid-1f6cc992-e572-4f3c-b62a-cb6111383e67/mbid-1f6cc992-e572-4f3c-b62a-cb6111383e67-11570630075_thumb250.jpg", "song": "Trash", "track_id": "e3f30cc7-2ddc-3616-9b45-31e3749f1ce2", "recording_id": "0c9ca44b-c650-4387-8d65-c80532b28a90", "artist": "New York Dolls", "artist_ids": [ "1b96b9c9-0832-40cb-9f8d-7274de3733fc" ], "album": "New York Dolls", "release_id": "1f6cc992-e572-4f3c-b62a-cb6111383e67", "release_group_id": "4cdd4c59-e38f-382b-b01c-e69829faa69c", "labels": [ "Mercury Records" ], "label_ids": [ "995428e7-81b6-41dd-bd38-5a7a0ece8ad6" ], "release_date": "1989-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP David Johansen (aka Buster Poindexter)--the singer and last surviving member of the New York Dolls--who died on February 28 in his home in New York City. It was revealed in early 2025 that he had stage 4 cancer and a brain tumor. \n--\n“I used to think about my voice like: ‘What’s it gonna sound like? What’s it going to be when I do this song?’ And I’d get myself into a knot about it,” Johansen told The Associated Press in 2023. “At some point in my life, I decided: ‘Just sing the (expletive) song. With whatever you got.’", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592620, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592620/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:48:55-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "comment": "", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "airbreak" }, { "id": 3592619, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592619/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:46:05-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Paranoid", "track_id": "47d20cbe-5b6f-369c-a59f-03469cbb685d", "recording_id": "868e3b55-4e4a-475f-94a8-020a6edc0aa2", "artist": "Black Sabbath", "artist_ids": [ "5182c1d9-c7d2-4dad-afa0-ccfeada921a8" ], "album": "Paranoid", "release_id": "d820f080-845a-4525-8e46-087ce9f8cdda", "release_group_id": "cc053745-c447-3566-8f27-bed5438c9133", "labels": [ "Vertigo" ], "label_ids": [ "1b3b52a5-ef89-4f8b-8d5f-e15a7a58863b" ], "release_date": "1970-09-18", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP Ozzy Osbourne, who died on July 22nd at the age of 76, just three weeks after his final performance.\n\nTony Iommi on Ozzy and the final concert:\n\"He loved what he did, he loved music, he loved playing together, and I'm so glad we had the opportunity of getting together again to do the [farewell] show,\" Iommi told BBC Radio 4's Today. \n\n\"It was brilliant being with all the guys again, and the atmosphere, and it was brilliant for Ozzy because he really wanted to do that, he felt at home there and it was good for all of us.\"\n\nhttps://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c17w4wn71z9o\n\nBlack Sabbath's final song ever played live was \"Paranoid\"", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592618, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592618/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:44:44-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Kick This Ass", "track_id": null, "recording_id": null, "artist": "Paul Schaefer", "artist_ids": [ "6f4f7682-b62d-451d-a3c1-b397d0042d24" ], "album": "This Is Spinal Tap", "release_id": null, "release_group_id": null, "labels": [ "Embassy Pictures" ], "label_ids": [], "release_date": "1984-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP Rob Reiner", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592617, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592617/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:42:22-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/7c1f1cd2-fa63-4b52-be0e-a0a23fed167b/9856429653-500.jpg", "thumbnail_uri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/7c1f1cd2-fa63-4b52-be0e-a0a23fed167b/9856429653-250.jpg", "song": "Hell Hole", "track_id": null, "recording_id": "7cf4d59d-70e5-4281-8adc-3bfbd06d2fa8", "artist": "Spın̈al Tap", "artist_ids": [ "d0a0b3a2-ea58-4a7a-b18c-849d589bfac7" ], "album": "This Is Spinal Tap", "release_id": null, "release_group_id": "2f126ac8-e7ae-3124-be5e-70607b7b8358", "labels": [ "Polydor" ], "label_ids": [ "ce24ab18-1bd6-4293-a486-546d13d6a5e2" ], "release_date": "1984-01-01", "rotation_status": null, "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP Rob Reiner, director of 'This Is Spinal Tap' (1984) and \"The Princess Bride\" (1987), who was found dead by homicide on December 14th, and David Kaff, who played Viv Savage, keyboardist of Spinal Tap, who died in his sleep in July.\n\n\"Spinal Tap\" was Reiner's directorial debut as a mockumentary and would go onto become a cult classic.\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/dec/15/rob-reiner-obituary\n\nDavid Kaff's bandmates in Mutual of Alameda’s Wild Kingdom wrote that: “David always had a kind word and a quick wit that would slay you where you stand. Then he’d make you smile doing it! RIP dear brother.”\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/jul/15/david-kaff-spinal-tap-keyboardist-and-musician-dies-aged-79", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592615, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592615/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:39:47-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "https://ia800400.us.archive.org/18/items/mbid-c82e1d1d-ef83-4a07-9ed0-f944837a7e39/mbid-c82e1d1d-ef83-4a07-9ed0-f944837a7e39-21920519412_thumb500.jpg", "thumbnail_uri": "https://ia800400.us.archive.org/18/items/mbid-c82e1d1d-ef83-4a07-9ed0-f944837a7e39/mbid-c82e1d1d-ef83-4a07-9ed0-f944837a7e39-21920519412_thumb250.jpg", "song": "Crazy Horses", "track_id": "b7bc8c50-c372-331c-b895-da44bfe860f7", "recording_id": "d18d6d0d-3cbf-4bb4-b73a-412e4ea8ec65", "artist": "The Osmonds", "artist_ids": [ "be96eda1-7e36-44f6-affe-80780400fae0" ], "album": "Crazy Horses", "release_id": "c82e1d1d-ef83-4a07-9ed0-f944837a7e39", "release_group_id": "9f847d4c-1221-3c8f-b6ea-f59ff8499fbf", "labels": [], "label_ids": [], "release_date": "1972-01-01", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "RIP Wayne Osmond, who died at 73 on January 1st, 2025 from a stroke.\n\nWhile Wayne never sang lead vocals, he possessed a fine baritone voice, played multiple instruments including the drums, saxophone and lead guitar and also had perfect pitch. “Whenever my brothers wanted the instruments tuned, I was the one they turned to,” he revealed.\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/music/2025/jan/06/wayne-osmond-obituary", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592614, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592614/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:36:14-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "song": "Sing a Simple Song", "track_id": "c8517d8d-e84d-4671-accc-12e13c28a5f3", "recording_id": "1eaf4ecb-56b6-4c92-b8ae-bb3d3de69809", "artist": "Sly & the Family Stone", "artist_ids": [ "b7ec4c54-1f93-4bf2-957f-7b9921ab84ea" ], "album": "Stand!", "release_id": "0425074d-a3e9-4b4c-ba0e-de34f15384a9", "release_group_id": "86871123-60e4-30a5-aae3-36e810e0964b", "labels": [ "Epic" ], "label_ids": [ "8f638ddb-131a-4cc3-b3d4-7ebdac201b55" ], "release_date": "1969-04-01", "rotation_status": "Library", "is_local": false, "is_request": false, "is_live": false, "comment": "Stone formed the band with three of his younger siblings – Freddie, Rose and Vet. They were joined by musicians Larry Graham, Jerry Martini, Cynthia Robinson and Greg Errico.\n--\n\"Stand!\" is one of the greatest albums ever released and features \"Sing a Simple Song\", \"I Want to Take You Higher\", \"Stand!\", \"Everyday People\", and \"You Can Make It If You Try\". This song has been sampled more than 450 times. Want to watch something great? Of course you do. Sly on the Ed Sullivan show. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8r32Scvbds", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "trackplay" }, { "id": 3592613, "uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/plays/3592613/?format=api", "airdate": "2025-12-18T08:33:23-08:00", "show": 65409, "show_uri": "https://api.kexp.org/v2/shows/65409/?format=api", "image_uri": "", "thumbnail_uri": "", "comment": "", "location": 1, "location_name": "Default", "play_type": "airbreak" } ] }