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.
Search and Destroy [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
2.
Gimme Danger [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
3.
Hard to Beat (Pretty Face) [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
4.
Penetration [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
5.
Raw Power [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
6.
I Need Somebody [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
7.
Death Trip [Original Stooges Mix]
- Iggy & the Stooges
8.
I Need Somebody
- Iggy & the Stooges
9.
Hard to Beat
- Iggy & the Stooges
10.
Death Trip
- Iggy & the Stooges
11.
Raw Power
- Iggy & the Stooges
12.
Search and Destroy
- Iggy & the Stooges
13.
Shake Appeal
- Iggy & the Stooges
14.
Not Right
- Iggy & the Stooges
15.
Raw Power [Stooges Mix][*]
- Iggy & the Stooges
16.
Shake Appeal [Stooges Mix][*]
- Iggy & the Stooges
17.
Search and Destroy [Stoogers Mix][*]
- Iggy & the Stooges
The final mix by David Bowie of the Stooges' final studio album has been a subject of open debate since the day of its release in 1973. Some see it as a total botch job, with the vocals and guitar overdubs set so far out front of the bass and drums (collapsed into mono, stripped of its high frequencies, then echoed to death) as to appear comical. Others see it as a mix every bit as anarchic as the music itself. That debate is fueled even further by the first legal appearances of these alternate mixes done by Iggy and the Stooges prior to Bowie's intervention. On tracks like "I Need Somebody" and "Gimme Danger," the focus is much sharper than the released version, while on others ("Hard to Beat,""Raw Power,""Search and Destroy") Iggy's vocal is obscured by liberal doses of too much echo. An aircheck from early 1973 gives us grainy, abrasive speeded up alternates of seven more tracks and the compilation closes with three more from late in 1972, clearly showing that the boys had theories on mixing that were every bit as off the wall as Bowie's finals. Final score: not necessarily better, but very different.