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.
Porcelain
- Moby
2.
Here With Me [Chillin' With the Family Mix]
- Dido
3.
Silence
- Delerium / McLachlan, Sarah
4.
Teardrop
- Massive Attack
5.
This Love
- Armstrong, Craig / Fraser, Elizabeth
6.
Sweet Lullaby
- Deep Forest
7.
Stella
- Vollenweider, Andreas
8.
Love on a Real Train (Risky Business)
- Tangerine Dream
9.
No Ordinary Love
- Sade
10.
Just Wave Hello (Ford Global Anthem)
- Church, Charlotte
11.
Satie 1
- Endorphin
12.
Fields of Gold
- Cassidy, Eva
13.
Rose [From Titanic]
- Horner, James
14.
Saltwater
- Brennan, Máire / Chicane
15.
She Cries Your Name
- Strange Cargo
16.
Jung at Heart (From Volkswagen Commercial)
- Master Cylinder
Not just another downbeat collection, The Classic Chillout Album is afforded a special status for a simple reason: standing behind it is the licensing weight of the Sony Corporation. The collection balances a spate of restful electronica hits (Moby's "Porcelain,"Massive Attack's "Teardrop,"Dido's "Here With Me,"Delerium's "Silence") with various crossovers -- Charlotte Church, Eva Cassidy, Andreas Vollenweider, James Horner, Jill Scott -- from classical to R&B, all pulled from associated labels. The Classic Chillout Album is refreshingly wide ranging, with great choices from Tangerine Dream ("Love on a Real Train" from Risky Business), William Orbit's Strange Cargo ("She Calls Your Name," with an early appearance from Beth Orton), Maxwell ("Ascension [Don't Ever Wonder]"), and Sade ("No Ordinary Love"). Still, there's little to disguise the fact that merely invoking the name of a hip style is enough to lend a certain coolness to what is essentially an updated form of adult contemporary. Anyone under 40 would call "chillout" a post-millennium code word for easy listening, but the good outweighs the bland over the course of 18 tracks.