Click on the field header labeled "Extensions" (to order the list by extension)
Scroll down and click on the entry for "ASX"
Click on the "Change Action" button
Select the top radio button labeled "Open them with the default application"
Repeat steps 6-8 for every instance of the ASX extension in the list. When you are done, click "Close" then click "OK" in the options window. Audio samples should now play properly in Windows Media Player.
Track Listings
Title
Listen
1.
The Girl from Ipanema
- Stan Getz / João Gilberto / Antonio Carlos Jobim
2.
Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars (Corcovado)
- Sarah Vaughan
3.
A Felicidade (Adieu Tristesse)
- Billy Eckstine
4.
O Morro Não Tem Vez
- Luiz Bonfá / Stan Getz
5.
Agua de Beber
- Astrud Gilberto / Antonio Carlos Jobim
6.
So Danço Samba
- Antonio Carlos Jobim
7.
Insensatez
- Wes Montgomery
8.
Once I Loved (O Amor en Paz)
- Shirley Horn
9.
One Note Samba
- Charlie Byrd / Stan Getz
10.
Meditation (Meditação)
- João Gilberto
11.
Desafinado
- Ella Fitzgerald
12.
Dindi
- Astrud Gilberto / Antonio Carlos Jobim
13.
Wave
- Oscar Peterson
14.
Águas de Março (Waters of March)
- Antonio Carlos Jobim / Elis Regina
15.
Chega de Saudade (No More Blues)
- Dizzy Gillespie
Rating: Genre: Latin Release Date: 05/23/1995 Run Time: 68:27
The first of several tribute albums issued just after Antonio Carlos Jobim's death, this one generally sticks to his most famous songs as interpreted by several Brazilian and American artists from PolyGram's archives. Jobim himself appears on such obvious choices as the best-selling Stan Getz, João Gilberto, and Astrud Gilberto hit "The Girl from Ipanema," and with Astrud on "Agua de Beber" and "Dindi," and again with Elis Regina on an "Aguas de Marco" that nearly breaks up with laughter. The American contributions are a mixed bag; Sarah Vaughan's "Corcovado," for example, is rather inappropriately overwrought but Wes Montgomery's "Insensatez" is a beautiful recording, with Jobim's favored arranger, Claus Ogerman, in top wistful form. The other jazzers on the CD are Billy Eckstine, Ella Fitzgerald, Oscar Peterson, Shirley Horn, and Dizzy Gillespie, proving that Jobim's timelessly aching music attracted quite a diverse cross-section of admirers.