{"next":"https://legacy-api.kexp.org/v1/play/?format=json&limit=20&offset=42460","previous":"https://legacy-api.kexp.org/v1/play/?format=json&limit=20&offset=42420","results":[{"playid":3612231,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T18:11:12Z","epoch_airdate":1770055872000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770055872000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":706929774,"name":"Kirk Franklin and the Family","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":567679266,"name":"Whatcha Lookin' 4","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":281632570,"year":1995},"track":{"trackid":1207372409,"name":"Melodies from Heaven"},"label":{"labelid":242786440,"name":"GospoCentric"},"comments":[{"commentid":1246821704,"text":"Whatcha Lookin' 4 is the third album released by Kirk Franklin and The Family, released on April 30, 1996 on GospoCentric Records. With sales of 2 million units, it is one of the best-selling gospel albums of all time.\nAll the songs on the album were written and produced by Franklin except \"Anything 4 U\" (produced by Buster & Shavoni) and \"When I Think About Jesus\", (Public domain, arrangement by Franklin).\n\nKirk Franklin & The Family included the following members: Kirk Franklin, Jeannette Johnson, Keisha Grandy, Terri Pace, Stephanie Glynn, Demetrice \"De\" Clinkscale, Dalon Collins, David Mann, Darrell Blair, Byron Cole, Jon \"J.D.\" Drummond, Yolanda McDonald, Sheila \"Mother\" Brice, Tamela Mann, Theresa Young, Carrie \"Mousey\" Young Davis."}],"showid":65822},{"playid":3612230,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T18:07:48Z","epoch_airdate":1770055668000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770055668000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1758281678,"name":"Tarika Blue","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1758281678,"name":"Tarika Blue","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":56266616,"year":1977},"track":{"trackid":286038409,"name":"Dreamflower"},"label":{"labelid":2079520783,"name":"Chiaroscuro Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":788612539,"text":"Led by New York session player Phil Clendeninn, Tarika Blue was a lyrical, highly melodic fusion/jazz-funk outfit that had a small following (mostly on the East Coast) in the '70s. Tarika Blue came to the attention of a more contemporary audience when singer Erykah Badu sampled them on \"Didn't Cha Know.\""}],"showid":65822},{"playid":3612229,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T18:02:39Z","epoch_airdate":1770055359000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770055359000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1362514944,"name":"Norman Connors","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1538518209,"name":"Dark of Light","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":961943493,"year":1973},"track":{"trackid":924725926,"name":"Butterfly Dreams"},"label":{"labelid":1431686747,"name":"Legacy"},"comments":[{"commentid":961316448,"text":"Born March 1st, 1947 in Philadelphia.\n\nButterfly Dreams is a standout track by American jazz drummer and producer Norman Connors, appearing on his 1973 album Dark of Light. The song represents a pivotal moment in Connors' career as he transitioned from the avant-garde and \"spiritual jazz\" circles into the lush, melodic jazz-fusion and R&B that would later make him a household name.\n\n\"Like Roy Ayers, George Benson, and Patrice Rushen, Norman Connors is best known for his major R&B hits but started out as a jazz improviser. The drummer/composer was born and raised in Philadelphia, where he lived in the same neighborhood as Bill Cosby and became interested in jazz when he was only a child. As a kid in elementary school, Connors was exposed to jazz extensively thanks to such schoolmates as drummer Lex Humphries and the younger brother of bassist and Jazz Messenger-to-be Spanky De Brest. Connors was in junior high when he began sneaking into jazz clubs and sat in for Elvin Jones at a John Coltrane gig. At 13, he first got to meet his idol, Miles Davis, and started expressing his admiration for the famous trumpeter by dressing like him. Connors went on to study music at Philly's Temple University and the Juilliard School of Music in New York. Gigs with Jackie McLean, Jack McDuff, and Sam Rivers followed, and he was first recorded as a sideman when Archie Shepp employed him on his 1967 Impulse! session Magic of Ju-Ju.\" (allmusic's Alex Henderson). https://bit.ly/46tSLZ8\n\nhttps://www.instagram.com/normanconnorsofficial"}],"showid":65822},{"playid":3612228,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:54:27Z","epoch_airdate":1770054867000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770054867000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":2032488758,"name":"Rage Against the Machine","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1840518300,"name":"…From Los Angeles, California","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1691617734,"year":1999},"track":{"trackid":2104038354,"name":"Killing in the Name"},"label":{"labelid":2097627989,"name":"Epic"},"comments":[{"commentid":354375715,"text":"Released in 1992, \"'Killing in the Name' was written six months after the Rodney King beating and the ensuing riots in Los Angeles. Zack De La Rocha never sounded as angry as he does here as he slowly builds on the repeating line, 'Some of those that work forces / Are the same that burn crosses.'\n\n\"Here, forces refer to the police, military, or other groups who are meant to protect but, in certain cases, have abused their power... As the protest climaxes and the instrumental becomes chaotic, the outro screams perpetually against the power structures of today: 'F*** you, I won’t do what you tell me!'\"\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWXazVhlyxQ\n\nhttps://www.ratm.com/"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612227,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:49:40Z","epoch_airdate":1770054580000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770054580000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1779548725,"name":"TV on the Radio","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":923415672,"name":"Return to Cookie Mountain","largeimageuri":"https://dn721803.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-3c7f5b38-1f43-417e-bf31-75dd238a7516/mbid-3c7f5b38-1f43-417e-bf31-75dd238a7516-10669073258_thumb500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://dn721803.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-3c7f5b38-1f43-417e-bf31-75dd238a7516/mbid-3c7f5b38-1f43-417e-bf31-75dd238a7516-10669073258_thumb250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":672106981,"year":2006},"track":{"trackid":294208604,"name":"Wolf Like Me"},"label":{"labelid":1389815811,"name":"Interscope Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1079531193,"text":"The music video for \"Wolf Like Me\" starring poet Beau Sia was directed by Jon Watts and mixes two cinematic styles: black-and-white silent film and 1980s B-movie. America's Next Top Model cycle 4 winner Naima Mora was also featured in the video. https://tinyurl.com/mpbdrhna"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612226,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:46:03Z","epoch_airdate":1770054363000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770054363000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612225,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:43:58Z","epoch_airdate":1770054238000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770054238000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1721792417,"name":"Gary Clark Jr.","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1376620262,"name":"Come Together","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/6dfeeabe-f7ed-404b-ad64-41217f0ab8fb/37007051876-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/6dfeeabe-f7ed-404b-ad64-41217f0ab8fb/37007051876-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":559950054,"year":2017},"track":{"trackid":1154250939,"name":"Come Together"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":596042415,"text":"Gary Clark Jr. recorded this cover of \"Come Together\" for the Justice League soundtrack back in 2017. Check out the official video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7imYeuAfkg"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612224,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:38:50Z","epoch_airdate":1770053930000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770053930000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1048177488,"name":"The Roots feat. Cody ChesnuTT","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":795140141,"name":"Phrenology","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":424941486,"year":2002},"track":{"trackid":904958624,"name":"The Seed (2.0)"},"label":{"labelid":1124086012,"name":"MCA Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1677916310,"text":"The Roots, featuring Atlanta-based musician Cody Chesnutt on guitar and vocals!\nhttps://www.theroots.com/"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612223,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:36:22Z","epoch_airdate":1770053782000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770053782000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":2088833627,"name":"The Jimi Hendrix Experience","islocal":true},"release":{"releaseid":2073231515,"name":"Experience Hendrix: The Best of Jimi Hendrix","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":372213503,"year":1998},"track":{"trackid":91077271,"name":"Little Wing"},"label":{"labelid":1124086012,"name":"MCA Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1529313594,"text":"\"This song was inspired by the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, a concert held during three days of the \"Summer of Love\" (1967) featuring The Who, The Byrds, Janis Joplin, and many others. Attended by about 200,000 music fans, it happened two years before Woodstock. Jimi wrote about the atmosphere at the festival as if it was a girl. He described the feeling as \"Everybody really flying and in a nice mood.\" He named it \"Little Wing\" because he thought it could just fly away.\"\n\nhttps://www.songfacts.com/facts/jimi-hendrix/little-wing"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612222,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:29:37Z","epoch_airdate":1770053377000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770053377000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612221,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:28:17Z","epoch_airdate":1770053297000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770053297000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1870523819,"name":"Quincy Jones","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1897234460,"name":"You’ve Got It Bad Girl","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/66375564-7565-4dff-bfa6-674430cb0405/5713860317-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/66375564-7565-4dff-bfa6-674430cb0405/5713860317-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1922935522,"year":1973},"track":{"trackid":1467025088,"name":"Summer in the City"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":55761195,"text":"'You've Got It Bad Girl' is a 1973 album by Quincy Jones. The opening track is an interpretation of the Lovin' Spoonful's \"Summer in the City,\" and won Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement at 16th Annual Grammy Awards.\n\nThe album features interpretations of songs made famous by Stevie Wonder, themes from multiple TV and film series, and this Lovin' Spoonful track.  This version has been sampled by The Pharcyde, Outkast, The Roots, and more."}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612220,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:22:56Z","epoch_airdate":1770052976000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770052976000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1570713536,"name":"Arrested Development","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":755673737,"name":"3 Years, 5 Months and 2 Days in the Life Of…","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1024863232,"year":1992},"track":{"trackid":510467622,"name":"People Everyday"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":544856668,"text":"Remake/re-envisioning of the Sly & the Family Stone classic!"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612219,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:19:28Z","epoch_airdate":1770052768000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770052768000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1990080846,"name":"Sly & the Family Stone","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":434862079,"name":"Summer of Soul (... Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) [original Motion Picture Soundtrack]","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":435843897,"year":2022},"track":{"trackid":517290898,"name":"Everyday People"},"label":{"labelid":1431686747,"name":"Legacy"},"comments":[{"commentid":1888964932,"text":"Lots of requests for Sly & the Family Stone this morning! \n---\nHere's a conversation with musician and filmmaker Questlove about the incredible soundtrack for his documentary \"Summer of Soul\" about the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival:  https://www.npr.org/2022/02/09/1079541332/a-conversation-with-questlove-on-his-summer-of-soul-soundtrack\n\nR.I.P. to the great Sly Stone who we lost last year. https://www.npr.org/2025/06/09/1209525990/sly-stone-obituary"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612218,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:15:41Z","epoch_airdate":1770052541000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770052541000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612217,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:12:26Z","epoch_airdate":1770052346000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770052346000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1996063062,"name":"Minnie Riperton","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1043754096,"name":"Kind of Soul","largeimageuri":"https://ia601403.us.archive.org/33/items/mbid-0181d5bb-0232-4d2e-80d7-baf0b6f50709/mbid-0181d5bb-0232-4d2e-80d7-baf0b6f50709-5918551970_thumb500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://ia601403.us.archive.org/33/items/mbid-0181d5bb-0232-4d2e-80d7-baf0b6f50709/mbid-0181d5bb-0232-4d2e-80d7-baf0b6f50709-5918551970_thumb250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":498650044,"year":2002},"track":{"trackid":644323930,"name":"Baby This Love I Have"},"label":{"labelid":686750741,"name":"Small"},"comments":[{"commentid":1345008409,"text":"The hook in A Tribe Called Quest's 'Check the Rhime' samples Minnie Riperton’s 1975 song “Baby, This Love I Have”"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612216,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:08:14Z","epoch_airdate":1770052094000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770052094000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":688580010,"name":"Bill Withers","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1646302350,"name":"The Best of Bill Withers: Lean on Me","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1140044235,"year":2000},"track":{"trackid":508935512,"name":"Lovely Day"},"label":{"labelid":1431686747,"name":"Legacy"},"comments":[{"commentid":1451191987,"text":"\"Withers told Songfacts: \"We're all sponges in a sense. You put us around very nice people, and the nice things come out in us. You put us around some jerks, and we practice being jerks. We all adjust. Did you ever notice the difference in the way you speak to your grandmother or your best contemporary friend? If I had sat down with the same music and my collaborator had been somebody else with a different personality, it probably would have caused something else to cross my mind lyrically.\"\n\nhttps://www.songfacts.com/facts/bill-withers/lovely-day"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612215,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:04:30Z","epoch_airdate":1770051870000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770051870000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":622441636,"name":"Michael Jackson","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1913465059,"name":"Thriller","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":2104344316,"year":1982},"track":{"trackid":453934819,"name":"P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":681852344,"text":"\"P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)\" is the sixth single from 'Thriller.'\n\n\"Nobody could have prepared anybody for the success of Thriller, since the magnitude of its success was simply unimaginable -- an album that sold 40 million copies in its initial chart run, with seven of its nine tracks reaching the Top Ten (for the record, the terrific \"Baby Be Mine\" and the pretty good ballad \"The Lady in My Life\" are not like the others). This was a record that had something for everybody...\"\n\nhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/thriller-mw0000056882"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612214,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T17:01:52Z","epoch_airdate":1770051712000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770051712000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612213,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T16:59:10Z","epoch_airdate":1770051550000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770051550000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1745739329,"name":"Earth, Wind & Fire","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1449838087,"name":"Spirit","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/361986fa-2f14-44b1-abba-905944443aca/40543609791-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/361986fa-2f14-44b1-abba-905944443aca/40543609791-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":10220925,"year":1976},"track":{"trackid":1690718990,"name":"Getaway"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":2025078730,"text":"#1 Disco/funk hit from 1976 -- https://kexp.org\n\nThe band chose the name \"Spirit\" for this LP after the track by the same name they'd written to show their gratitude to producer Charles Stepney -- but he never got to hear the song, as he died of sudden heart attack on May 17, 1976.  The band went on to name this album after that tribute track in Stepney's memory"}],"showid":65821},{"playid":3612212,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-02-02T16:55:17Z","epoch_airdate":1770051317000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1770051317000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":26441638,"name":"Bobby Womack","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":28893055,"name":"The Very Best of Bobby Womack","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":486184131,"year":1999},"track":{"trackid":127460153,"name":"Woman's Gotta Have It"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":445523396,"text":"The idea for the Bobby Womack hit \"Woman's Gotta Have It\" came from a marital situation that songwriter Darryl Carter knew of where the wife was about to \"tip out\" on an unresponsive husband. Carter met Womack when Carter was an engineer at Memphis' American Sound Studios in the '60s. During that time, he and Linda Womack wrote \"Woman's Gotta Have It\" with Jackie Wilson in mind. https://www.allmusic.com/song/womans-gotta-have-it-mt0001754897"}],"showid":65821}]}