GET /v1/play/?format=api&offset=57900
HTTP 200 OK
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Content-Type: application/json
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                "name": "What Can I Do for You?"
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                "name": "Epic"
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                    "text": "Patti Labelle, Nona Hendryx, and Sarah Dash made LaBelle. The Nightbirds album featured the US #1 hit \"Lady Marmalade\" and was the group's best-selling album."
                }
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                "name": "Mississippi Goddam"
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                "name": "Philips Records Ltd."
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                    "text": "By request from David in Madison!\n\nNina Simone originally released \"Mississippi Goddam\" on her album Nina Simone in Concert in 1964, which was based on recordings from three concerts she gave at Carnegie Hall earlier that year. The album was her first release for the Dutch label Philips Records and is indicative of the more political turn her recorded music took during this period."
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T03:03:34Z",
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                "name": "Moses Boyd",
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                "name": "Displaced Diaspora",
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                "year": 2018
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                "name": "Rye Lane Shuffle"
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            "label": null,
            "comments": [
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                    "commentid": 1807514179,
                    "text": "Born in South London, Boyd began playing drums at the age of 13, taking as much inspiration from jazz greats like Miles Davis as from the grime albums of Dizzee Rascal. After initial instruction from jazz drummer Bobby Dodsworth, Boyd became a part of the jazz education program Tomorrow's Warriors while studying at Trinity Laban College, cutting his teeth at local jam sessions. He formed the duo Binker & Moses with tenor saxophonist Binker Golding and their 2015 debut, Dem Ones, earned an award for Best Jazz Act at the urban MOBO (Music of Black Origin) Awards.  : https://www.allmusic.com/artist/moses-boyd-mn0003219986/biography"
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                "name": "Air break"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T03:00:31Z",
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:54:45Z",
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                "name": "Aretha Franklin",
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                "name": "What a Fool Believes"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Arista"
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            "comments": [
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                    "text": "Recognize that voice?  That song?\nThis song was written by Kenny Loggins and Michael McDonald and was recorded by The Doobie Brothers in 1978 (with McDonald singing lead.)  This is Aretha's brilliant cover with Toto as the backing musicians.\n\nFranklin added her rendition of the song to the 1980 album, Aretha, her 26th studio album, her second eponymous album, and her first for Arista Records after a 12-year tenure with Atlantic Records."
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                "name": "Kid Creole And The Coconuts Presents Coati Mundi",
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                "name": "Me No Pop I",
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                "year": 1980
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                "name": "Que Pasa/Me No Pop I"
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                "name": "ZE Records"
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                    "text": "Kid Creole And The Coconuts were a Latin pop band founded by August Darnell aka Thomas Browder in 1980 in New York City. Fronted by Kid Creole backed by the trio of The Coconuts and also featuring Coati Mundi, they enjoyed most of their success in the eighties. Their debut album was critically well-received but not successful commercially. Their second album was a concept album matched with a New York Public Theater stage production; it received positive reviews, with Darnell recognized as a clever lyricist and astute composer, arranger and producer. Their international breakthrough came with their third album, 1982's Tropical Gangsters, which hit #3 in the UK."
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Sugar Hill Records"
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            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 2142711184,
                    "text": "The Sequence is noted as the first female hip hop trio signed to the Sugar Hill Records label in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The group consisted of Cheryl Cook, known as \"Cheryl The Pearl\", Gwendolyn Chisolm, known as \"Blondy\", and lead singer and rapper Angie Stone, known as Angie B. They all grew up in Columbia, South Carolina. This track was was based on a cheer they performed at school together.\n\n \"Funk You Up\" is the second single to be released on Sugar Hill Records, following the release of \"Rapper's Delight\" by the Sugarhill Gang.\n\n\"Funk You Up\" has been sampled or redone by a number of artists such as Organized Rhyme, Dr. Dre, Erykah Badu, En Vogue, and Mark Ronson."
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:39:20Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1759113560000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759113560000)/",
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                "name": "Anthony White",
                "islocal": false
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                "name": "I Can’t Turn You Loose / Block Party",
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                "name": "Block Party"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Salsoul Records"
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            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 660011139,
                    "text": "Anthony White released \"Block Party\" as a b-side to \"I Can't Turn You Loose\" in 1977 with Salsoul Records.\n\nAnthony White signed to the Philadelphia International label in 1975. There he released a debut single entitled 'Hey Baby'. The song was not featured on his 1976 album 'Could It Be Magic', an album which was highly popular in the U.K. and featured the song 'Stop And Think It Over'."
                }
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                "name": "Air break"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:35:15Z",
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            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759113315000)/",
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:29:30Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1759112970000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759112970000)/",
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                "name": "Luther",
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                "name": "Luther",
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                "year": 1976
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                "name": "Funky Music (Is a Part of Me)"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Cotillion"
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            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 1626715271,
                    "text": "Luther was a vocal quintet lead by the late Luther Vandross before he found success as a solo artist. After hiring Vandross as a background singer and vocal arranger for his album Young Americans, David Bowie heard \"Funky Music (Is a Part of Me)\" and refashioned it to his song \"Fascination\" for the album.\n\nLuther is the debut album by recording artist group Luther, released in May 1976. The album features Luther Vandross with members Anthony Hinton, Diane Sumler, Theresa V. Reed, and Christine Wiltshire.\n\n\"It's Good for the Soul\", \"Funky Music (Is a Part of Me)\" and \"The 2nd Time Around\" were released as singles, but the album failed to chart. Vandross bought back the rights to the album after the record label dropped the group, preventing its later re-release until after Vandross' death. It was re-released April 19, 2024 by Legacy Recordings.\n\nThe song \"The 2nd Time Around\" was later re-recorded also titled \"The Second Time Around\" in the closing track on his 1988 album Any Love."
                }
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:22:58Z",
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                "year": 1963
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                "name": "Fingertips, Parts 1 & 2"
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            "label": {
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                "name": "Motown"
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                    "text": "\"Fingertips\" was originally a jazz instrumental recorded for Wonder's first studio album, The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie. The live version of the song was recorded in 1963 during a Motortown Revue performance at the Regal Theater in Chicago, Illinois.\n\nThe edit point that begins \"Part 2\" of \"Fingertips\" is when Wonder shouts \"Everybody say 'yeah!'\", initiating a call-and-response exchange with the audience. After a couple of sung verses, each followed by Wonder's brief harmonica playing (solos accompanied only by the audience's rhythmic clapping), Wonder appears to bring things to a conclusion. \nOn the night of the recording, Wonder, as usual started to leave the stage and the band went into the exit music, as comedian Bill Murray (known professionally as Winehead Willie) exhorted the crowd to \"give him a hand\"; however, Stevie unexpectedly changed his mind, returning to sing the \"goodbye\" encore. The other musicians were caught out, and the bass players had changed over to prepare for the next act on the bill, Mary Wells. As Wonder moves into his impromptu encore, the new bass player, Joe Swift, having replaced Larry Moses, can be heard on the recording, yelling out: \"What key? What key?\""
                }
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:20:09Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1759112409000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759112409000)/",
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                "name": "The Bar-Kays",
                "islocal": false
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                "name": "Sang and Dance / Son of Shaft",
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            "releaseevent": {
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            "track": {
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                "name": "Sang and Dance"
            },
            "label": null,
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 1277060386,
                    "text": "The Bar-Kays were originally formed in Memphis, Tennessee, 1966, as a sextet backing group for Stax Records. They looked like they had a healthy career in front of them as a session band & recording outfit before the backbone of the group was killed, along with Otis Redding who had hired them as his backing band for a tour, in a horrific plane crash.\n\nOnly Ben Cauley survived the crash and went on to form what could be dubbed Bar-Kays Mark II. James Alexander (Bass) was also one of the original members but was not aboard the plane because of limited seats on Redding's plane. For Alexander and Cauley and new members Michael Toles, Willie Hall, Ronnie Gordon and Harvey Henderson, the track 'Sang & Dance' was one of the first tracks from the new group, cut in late 1969.\n\nLink/Credit:\nhttps://www.discogs.com/artist/40301-Bar-Kays"
                }
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            "playtype": {
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:17:45Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1759112265000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759112265000)/",
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                "name": "Sharon Jones and the Dap‐Kings",
                "islocal": false
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                "name": "Dap‐Dippin’ with Sharon Jones and the Dap‐Kings",
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                "year": 2002
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            "track": {
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                "name": "What Have You Done for Me Lately?"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 1517441256,
                "name": "Daptone Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 373310935,
                    "text": "Sharon Jones and the Dap‐Kings offered their soulful cover of Janet's 1986 breakthrough single, \"What Have You Done for Me Lately?\" on their 2002 album Dap‐Dippin’ with Sharon Jones and the Dap‐Kings."
                }
            ],
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                "name": "Media play"
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            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:16:22Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1759112182000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759112182000)/",
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                "name": "Fred Wesley and The J.B.’s",
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                "year": 1974
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                "name": "Blow Your Head"
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                "name": "People Records"
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                {
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                    "text": "Fred Wesley Jr. is a legendary trombone player, who has since performed with and composed for some of R&B’s most successful artists. Born and raised in Mobile, Alabama, he has described himself as a “jazz snob,” who grew up listening to Nat King Cole, Duke Ellington and the likes.  As a teenager, he played trombone in a band for Ike and Tina Turner. From 1968 to 1975, Wesley was music director, arranger, trombonist, and a primary composer for James Brown’s Band, The J.B.’s. And he is credited with helping the band to shift its sound from soul to funk, a style that would soon become dominant in R&B music. In 1976, Wesley and fellow horn player Maceo Parker left Brown’s band to join another artist on the cutting edge of funk, George Clinton. They worked with Clinton to create such influential Parliament-Funkadelic albums as The Mothership Connection and The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein. \n--\nThis song was written by Fred Wesley and Mr. James Brown. That's Bobby Byrd on synthesizer."
                }
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                "name": "Air break"
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2025-09-29T02:08:29Z",
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            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759111709000)/",
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                "name": "The Kay‐Gees",
                "islocal": false
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                "releaseid": 2066929445,
                "name": "Master Plan (Complete Recordings 1974-78)",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/f582a706-5f5e-4d08-83e4-e2234b8b5883/16496897087-500.jpg",
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                "releaseeventid": 1235883838,
                "year": 2007
            },
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                "name": "I Believe in Music"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 1472204412,
                "name": "Gang Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 594869442,
                    "text": "The Kay-Gee's originally released \"I Believe in Music\" on the 1976 album Find a Friend, but you can find this and all their tracks on the 2007 album Master Plan (Complete Recordings 1974-78)."
                }
            ],
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        {
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                "name": "Action",
                "largeimageuri": null,
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                "releaseeventid": 1406855729,
                "year": 1982
            },
            "track": {
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                "name": "Action (disco version)"
            },
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                "labelid": 806377223,
                "name": "Mercury Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 51197409,
                    "text": "Orange Krush released the disco version of \"Action\" as its b-side in 1982 with Mercury Records.\n\nOrange Krush was comprised of Larry Smith (bass), Trevor Gale (drums) and Davy DMX (guitar / turntables). The group is best known for being the backing band for the seminal Run-DMC albums \"RUN-D.M.C.\" and \"King Of Rock.\""
                }
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                "name": "What Time Is It?",
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                "releaseeventid": 1821358881,
                "year": 1982
            },
            "track": {
                "trackid": 1893343202,
                "name": "Gigolos Get Lonely Too"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 1587906892,
                "name": "Warner Bros. Records"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 189191108,
                    "text": "\"Gigolos Get Lonely Too\" is the fifth track from the Time's six-song album, What Time Is It?. One of the first songs recorded for the album, it was produced, arranged, composed and performed by Prince with Morris Day later adding his lead vocals."
                }
            ],
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        {
            "playid": 3558949,
            "playtype": {
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                "name": "Media play"
            },
            "airdate": "2025-09-29T01:52:35Z",
            "epoch_airdate": 1759110755000,
            "epoch_airdate_v2": "/Date(1759110755000)/",
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                "32": null,
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            },
            "artist": {
                "artistid": 1920555436,
                "name": "Patrice Rushen",
                "islocal": false
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                "releaseid": 913376568,
                "name": "Straight From the Heart",
                "largeimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/6141455c-ca06-4efb-92af-1d992ca30b68/1503085738-500.jpg",
                "smallimageuri": "https://coverartarchive.org/release/6141455c-ca06-4efb-92af-1d992ca30b68/1503085738-250.jpg"
            },
            "releaseevent": {
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                "year": 1982
            },
            "track": {
                "trackid": 2102699893,
                "name": "Remind Me"
            },
            "label": {
                "labelid": 926448958,
                "name": "Elektra"
            },
            "comments": [
                {
                    "commentid": 866743204,
                    "text": "Patrice Louise Rushen (born September 30, 1954) is a jazz pianist and R&B singer, a composer, record producer, multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, and music director.\n\nHer 1982 single \"Forget Me Nots\" received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and was on her 7th studio album Straight from the Heart, along with this cut Remind Me. \n\nAnd yes! That's Rushen playing that gorgeous electric piano solo! She also plays synthesizers and provides percussion on the track. \"Remind Me\" - written by Rushen and her backing vocalist Karen Evans - has been sampled more than 100 times!\n\nhttps://college.berklee.edu/people/patrice-rushen"
                }
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        }
    ]
}