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.
More Than Music
- DukeDaGod / Hell Rell / JR Writer
2.
Dipset Symphony
- 40 Cal. / Hell Rell / Jim Jones / Juelz Santana / JR Writer
3.
Back in the Building
- Hell Rell
4.
Santana's Town, Pt. 2
- Juelz Santana
5.
What Is This
- Jim Jones
6.
Open Your Eyez
- 40 Cal.
7.
Somebody Gotta Die Tonight
- Cam'ron / Fabulous
8.
You Make Me Say
- JR Writer
9.
Sucker for Love Radio Interlude
- Ash / DukeDaGod
10.
So Whats It Gonna Be?
- Fabulous
11.
The Best Out
- 40 Cal. / Junie Bezel / Hell Rell / JR Writer
12.
Bloodshed R.I.P. Freestyle
13.
No Days Off
- Juelz Santana
14.
40th Boys
15.
The Pit
- Hell Rell / JR Writer
16.
Get Down
- Cam'ron / Juelz Santana
17.
So Gangsta
- Jha Jha / Unkasa
18.
What Kind of Life Is This
- Jim Jones / Juelz Santana
More Than Music, Vol. 1 is a glorified mixtape with little appeal beyond the Diplomats' devout following -- a following that helped carry the release into the Billboard album chart, despite being released on a label referred to by 50 Cent as an "artists' graveyard." Not bad for a slipshod release. Containing just enough roles from the big guns -- Cam'ron, Juelz Santana, Jim Jones -- to keep ears perked, More Than Music is more a way to showcase the crew's second stringers and up-and-comers. This lacks the playful spirit of several Dipset mixtapes released during the past couple years (a widely distributed Koch release can't play as fast and loose with the samples and outright beat swiping that makes the relatively "underground" Dipset mixes such a treat). View this as the Diplomats in spring training -- there's too much room allowed for untested newcomers, most of which have yet to establish their own identities.