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.
C & NW Railroad Blues
- Snuffy Jenkins
2.
If I Lose, I Don't Care
- Norman Blake
3.
West Virginia, My Home
- Hazel Dickens
4.
Talk About Suffering
- Ricky Skaggs
5.
Benton's Dream
- Tompkins County Horseflies
6.
Goodbye Miss Liza Jane
- Highwoods String Band
7.
Things in Life
- Don Stover
8.
You Led Me to the Wrong
- Ola Belle Reed
9.
Hunky Dory
- Alva Greene
10.
Shady Grove
- Wade Ward
11.
It Rained a Mist
- Ted Lundy
12.
I've Been All Around This World
13.
The First of May
- James Bryan
14.
Looking for Money
- The Chicken Chokers
15.
Too Young to Marry
- Bob Carlin
16.
That High Born Gal of Mine
- Bashful Brother Oswald
17.
Where the Old Red River Flows
- The Whitstein Brothers
18.
Take Me Back to Happy Valley
- The Bailey Brothers
19.
Just a Strand from a Yellow Curl
- The Blue Sky Boys
20.
Briarpicker Brown
- Buddy Thomas
21.
Let Us Travel On
- The Louvin Brothers
22.
Johnson's Old Grey Mule
- George Pegram
23.
Shut Up in the Mines of Coal Creek
- The Old Home String Band
24.
Reuben's Train
- Arnold Watson
25.
Soppin' the Gravy
- Mark O'Connor
26.
Fathers Have a Home Sweet Home
- E.C. and Orna Ball
Rating: Genre: Country Release Date: 08/13/1993 Run Time: 67:47
Rounder Records has long been a home for some of the finest folk, old-time, and bluegrass artists on the scene, and this 26-track sampler makes a wonderfully sequenced introduction to the label and what it has to offer. There are countless high points, including Ola Bell Reed's driving clawhammer banjo rhythm on her "You Led Me to the Wrong,"Alva Greene and Francis Gillum's brief instrumental "Hunky Dory," which is as scratchy as an old door hinge but endlessly melodic and infectious, and George Peagram's craggy version of "Johnson's Old Grey Mule," which reminds listeners how much basic humor is a key ingredient in old-time music, as Peagram's banjo flies along at almost bluegrass speed. The great Doc Watson, his brother, Arnold Watson, and his father-in-law, Gaither Carlton, do a great version of "Reuben's Train," which twists and turns with a wonderfully wild and archaic grace. This is a fine sampler, and more than that, it's a great album.