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.
Beginning
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
2.
Birth/Winter Solstice: Birth of the Sun-Child/Birth ...
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
3.
Childhood/Imbolic: Round Is Magic/Childhood Interlude/Childhood Chant
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
4.
Puberty/Spring Equinox: My First Moontime/Puberty ...
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
5.
Maidenhood/Beltane: May Eve/Maidenhood Interlude/Maidenhood Chant
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
6.
Motherhood/Summer Solstice: So Newly Come/I Dance Yes/Motherhood ...
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
7.
Menopause/Lammas: Blood-Rite of the Thirteenth Moon/Menopause ...
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
8.
Elderhood/Autumn Equinox: The Crone/Elderhood Interlude/Elderhood ...
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
9.
Death-Rebirth/Samhain: Death of the Old One/Death Chant
- National Women's Music Festival Orchestra & Chorus
Rating: Genre: Women''s Release Date: 02/21/1995 Run Time: 60:33
The National Women's Music Festival highlighted the premiere performance of Ouroboros: Seasons of Life--Kay Gardner's new oratorio. It was performed by six female soloists (ranging in age from eight to 80-something), a 100-voice women's orchestra, and a 50-member women's orchestra, conducted by Nan Washburn from The Women's Philharmonic. The work consists of eight movements, each beginning with a narrative solo, moving to an orchestral interlude and ending with a choral chant. Each movement corresponds with the stages of women's lives as defined by the seasons of the ancient Celtic calendar. This is by far Kay Gardner's most ambitious work to date.