GET /v1/play/?format=api&offset=14140
HTTP 200 OK
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Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Parrott Music Ltd."
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 1773099831,
                    "text": "Sampled in over 80 songs by artists including 2pac, Ghostface Killah, and Big Daddy Kane, Tom Jones released \"Looking Out My Window\" on his 12th studio album Help Yourself, in 1968."
                }
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                "name": "Air break"
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            "epoch_airdate": 1775444109000,
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                "name": "Incredible Bongo Band",
                "islocal": false
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                "name": "Ultimate Breaks & Beats, Volume 3",
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                "name": "Apache"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Street Beat Records"
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                {
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                    "text": "A 1973 version by the Incredible Bongo Band's \"Apache\" has been called \"hip-hop's national anthem.\" Although this version was not a hit on release, its long percussion break has been sampled countless times on hip hop and dance tracks since the 1980s. In March 2005, Q magazine placed \"Apache\" by the Shadows at number 96 on its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks.\n\nOne of the most famous breaks of all time https://www.complex.com/music/2012/11/a-history-of-the-apache-breakbeat/\nDid you know that this song has been sampled more than 800 times?? Watch the documentary about the origins and influence of the “national anthem of hip hop” that was recorded in Vancouver BC https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiuCdwSGUwo"
                }
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                "name": "Get Me Back on Time"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Atlantic"
            },
            "comments": [
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                    "text": "Sampled nearly 300 times, Wilson Picket released \"Get Me Back On Time\" in 1968, but you can find the track on the 2003 compilation album Ultimate Breaks & Beats, Volume 1 & 2."
                }
            ],
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        },
        {
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:48:12Z",
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            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775443692000)/",
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Metromedia Records"
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            "comments": [
                {
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                    "text": "In 1969, The Winstons released the single \"Color Him Father,\" but that's not nearly as important as its b-side, \"Amen, Brother\" features what is known as the Amen break, a drum break that has been widely sampled in numerous music genres. \n\nIn 1986, \"Amen Brother\" was included on Ultimate Breaks and Beats, a compilation of old funk and soul tracks with clean drum breaks intended for DJs. Salt-N-Pepa's 1986 single \"I Desire\" saw one of the earliest uses of the Amen break. \n\nA number of releases in 1988 took it into the mainstream, including \"Straight Outta Compton\" by N.W.A., Eric B. and Rakim’s ‘Casualties Of War,'  'Mindfields' by The Prodigy, D'you Know What I Mean? by Oasis, Zatoichi by Denzel Curry feat. slowthai, Slip Inside This House by Primal Scream, Nightcall by London Grammar, Second 2 None by Mura Masa feat. Christine and the Queens, Life in Mono by Mono and \"Keep It Going Now\" by Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock among many, many others.☑️"
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                "name": "Salt of the Earth",
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            "label": {
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            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 400952053,
                    "text": "The D.C.-based Soul Searchers were led by the soon-to-be “Godfather of Go-Go” himself, Chuck Brown.  Learn about this 1974 album here.: https://realgonemusic.com/products/the-soul-searchers-salt-of-the-earth-lp\n--\nSoul Searchers' \"Ashley's Roachclip\" has been sampled nearly 600 times by artists like 2pac, Big Daddy Kane, Moby, Mick Jagger, Ice Cube and more!\n\nOne of the most widely-sampled drum loops ever occurs between 3:30 and 3:50 on this instrumental joint."
                }
            ],
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                "name": "Air break"
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            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:35:23Z",
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                "name": "UFO"
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                "name": "99"
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            "comments": [
                {
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                    "text": "Sampled in Big Daddy Kane's \"Aint No Half Steppin',\" \"UFO\" was included on American rock band ESG's first EP in 1991, which was released 8 years after their 1983 debut album.\n\nESG's track was sampled over 400 times by artists like J. Cole, Tupac, Nas, J Dilla, The Notorious B.I.G., Q-Tip, MF DOOM, and hundreds more."
                }
            ],
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        },
        {
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:32:10Z",
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                "islocal": false
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                "name": "I Wouldn’t Change a Thing"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Mercury"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 756825479,
                    "text": "Sampled in over 100 songs, \"I Wouldn’t Change a Thing\" was released by Coke Escovedo on the album Comin' at Ya! in 1976."
                }
            ],
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                "name": "Impeach the President"
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                "name": "Alaga Records"
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            "comments": [
                {
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                    "text": "The Honey Drippers originally released \"Impeach The President\" in 1973, but what you're hearing is the Beatmann Danny Dan Remix, a KEXP Sunday Soul Exclusive!\n\nWritten and produced by Roy Charles Hammond, known as Roy C., \"Impeach the President\" was re-released in 2017, after being sampled hundreds of times since the mid-1980s. It is a protest song advocating the impeachment of then-President of the United States Richard Nixon."
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
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                "name": "Air break"
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:17:59Z",
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                "name": "Eastside Connection",
                "islocal": false
            },
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                "name": "Ultimate Breaks & Beats, Volume 13",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/b40124c1-4138-4f4f-b47a-d01846eb5bc4/28062429106-500.jpg",
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            },
            "label": {
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                "name": "Rampart Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
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                    "text": "Eastside Connection originally released \"Frisco Disco\" and b-side \"Birthday Medley\" in 1979, but you can find the track on the 1987 album Ultimate Breaks & Beats, Volume 13. \nThe track has been sampled dozens of times by artists, including Slick Rick, TLC, 2 Live Crew, and LL Cool J.\n\nEastside Connection was comprised of: Bertha Oropeza, Brandon Fields, Dick Mitchell, Geoff Lee, Hector Gonzalez, and Sam Cracchiolo."
                }
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        },
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            "playtype": {
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:12:36Z",
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            },
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                "name": "Roy Ayers",
                "islocal": false
            },
            "release": {
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                "name": "Ultimate Breaks & Beats, Volume 15",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/7caa764b-c44f-4c6b-86cf-76cc5386b259/28062430036-500.jpg",
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            },
            "releaseevent": {
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                "year": 1987
            },
            "track": {
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                "name": "Brother Green (The Disco King)"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 306935984,
                "name": "Street Beat Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 779651260,
                    "text": "Roy Ayers originally released \"Brother Green (The Disco King)\" in 1975, but you can find the track on the 1987 compilation album Ultimate Breaks & Beats, Volume 15."
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
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            "playtype": {
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:06:55Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1775441215000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775441215000)/",
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            },
            "artist": {
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                "name": "Babe Ruth",
                "islocal": false
            },
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                "name": "First Base",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/8c1ef9f5-abdc-4a0b-a330-2f3d9ce1dabc/9922718331-500.jpg",
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            },
            "releaseevent": {
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                "year": 1973
            },
            "track": {
                "trackid": 1470301360,
                "name": "The Mexican"
            },
            "label": null,
            "comments": [
                {
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                    "text": "70s British progressive rock band Babe Ruth released \"The Mexican\" on their 1973 album First Base.\n\nOriginally known as Shacklock then renamed to Babe Ruth, the group formed in 1971, disbanded five years later in 1976, then reformed 2002 for the album Que Pasa.\n\n\"The Mexican\" was more recently sampled in \"VCRs\" by JID & Vince Staples (2025). One of the most famous uses was Planet Rock by Afrika Bambaataa & Soulsonic Force, which helped define the electro-funk sound (1982)."
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        },
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                "name": "Air break"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T02:00:35Z",
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            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
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            "playtype": {
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T01:51:09Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1775440269000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775440269000)/",
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            },
            "artist": {
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                "name": "7th Wonder",
                "islocal": false
            },
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                "name": "Ultimate Breaks & Beats: The Complete Collection",
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            },
            "track": {
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                "name": "Daisy Lady"
            },
            "label": {
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                "name": "Parachute Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 450505941,
                    "text": "7th Wonder originally released \"Daisy Lady\" in 1979 but you can find the track on the 2006 compilation album Ultimate Breaks & Beats: The Complete Collection.\n\n7th Wonder is a funk octet from Tuskegee, Alabama. Members include: Allen Williams, Deborah Mathews, Iulus Chisholm, Jerome Thornton, Johnny Hammond, Marvin Patton, and William Butler."
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
            "playid": 3638306,
            "playtype": {
                "playtypeid": 1,
                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T01:48:30Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1775440110000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775440110000)/",
            "archive_urls": {
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                "64": null,
                "128": null,
                "256": null
            },
            "artist": {
                "artistid": 163705660,
                "name": "The Mohawks",
                "islocal": false
            },
            "release": {
                "releaseid": 242918084,
                "name": "The Champ",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/95d506ad-1d87-4eb5-ab69-8a1f7f8dc407/5813893040-500.jpg",
                "smallimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/95d506ad-1d87-4eb5-ab69-8a1f7f8dc407/5813893040-250.jpg"
            },
            "releaseevent": {
                "releaseeventid": 239596304,
                "year": 1968
            },
            "track": {
                "trackid": 55820702,
                "name": "The Champ"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 1648162007,
                "name": "Pama Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 988872391,
                    "text": "The Mohawks released \"The Champ\" in 1968. \nThe Mohawks were a British studio group fronted by arranger and session musician Alan Hawkshaw.\n\nThis song has been sampled more than 700 times, including by Frank Ocean for \"Nikes.\"\nFamous Samples of \"The Champ\" include:\nEric B. & Rakim: \"Eric B. Is President\" (1987)\nOnyx: \"Slam\" (1993)\nIni Kamoze: \"Here Comes the Hotstepper\" (1994)\nBeastie Boys: \"What Comes Around\" (1989)\nMC Hammer: \"Pump It Up\" (1988)\nSalt-n-Pepa: \"Tramp\" (1987)\nBig Daddy Kane: \"Smooth Operator\" (1989)\nMigos: \"Stir Fry\" (2018)"
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
            "playid": 3638305,
            "playtype": {
                "playtypeid": 1,
                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T01:45:04Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1775439904000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775439904000)/",
            "archive_urls": {
                "32": null,
                "64": null,
                "128": null,
                "256": null
            },
            "artist": {
                "artistid": 471688187,
                "name": "Melvin Bliss",
                "islocal": false
            },
            "release": {
                "releaseid": 588043602,
                "name": "Reward / Synthetic Substitution",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/77eaeef4-1d7c-467e-bd93-f471f8c793a5/33383244882-500.jpg",
                "smallimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/77eaeef4-1d7c-467e-bd93-f471f8c793a5/33383244882-250.jpg"
            },
            "releaseevent": {
                "releaseeventid": 961943493,
                "year": 1973
            },
            "track": {
                "trackid": 399269682,
                "name": "Synthetic Substitution"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 355324064,
                "name": "Contempo"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 737415066,
                    "text": "Melvin Bliss released \"Synthetic Substitution\" as a b-side to \"Reward\" in 1973.\nSampled in O.P.P. Drums we're performed by Bernard Purdie.\n\n\"There are few examples of hip-hop's capacity for preserving obscure nooks of our cultural past than the second life of Melvin Bliss, a relatively obscure 1970s singer whose \"Synthetic Substitution,\" a throwaway B-side, became one of the most frequently sampled songs of the late '80s and early '90s.\":  https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2010/07/melvin-bliss-rip/60457/"
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
            "playid": 3638304,
            "playtype": {
                "playtypeid": 4,
                "name": "Air break"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T01:34:00Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1775439240000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775439240000)/",
            "archive_urls": {
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                "256": null
            },
            "artist": null,
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            "releaseevent": null,
            "track": null,
            "label": null,
            "comments": [],
            "showid": 66376
        },
        {
            "playid": 3638303,
            "playtype": {
                "playtypeid": 1,
                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2026-04-06T01:30:31Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1775439031000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1775439031000)/",
            "archive_urls": {
                "32": null,
                "64": null,
                "128": null,
                "256": null
            },
            "artist": {
                "artistid": 2039261330,
                "name": "The Whole Darn Family",
                "islocal": false
            },
            "release": {
                "releaseid": 734520316,
                "name": "Has Arrived",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/b4a63e83-a40e-4f9b-940f-ea60a3633180/36807694872-500.jpg",
                "smallimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/b4a63e83-a40e-4f9b-940f-ea60a3633180/36807694872-250.jpg"
            },
            "releaseevent": {
                "releaseeventid": 10220925,
                "year": 1976
            },
            "track": {
                "trackid": 545819085,
                "name": "Seven Minutes of Funk"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 1375037889,
                "name": "Soul International"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 2123825352,
                    "text": "Interracial seven-piece funk band The Whole Darn Family emerged from Richmond, Virginia in the late 70's and were managed, produced and promoted by August \"Mr. Wiggles\" Moon who ran an independent label called Soul International Records from a storefront in Richmond's Southside District. \n\n\"Seven Minutes of Funk\" has become a cult favorite, as it's been sampled by Jay-Z, Wu-Tang Clan, Foxy Brown, Method Man, Biggie Smalls and countless other hip-hop artists."
                }
            ],
            "showid": 66376
        }
    ]
}