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.
Blues in a Bottle
- Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers
2.
Dollar Bill Blues
- Charlie Jordan
3.
Lost John Dean
- Bascom Lamar Lunsford
4.
Streak of Lean, Streak of Fat
- A.A. Gray / A.A. Gray & Seven Foot Dilly / Seven Foot Dilly & His Hot Pickles
5.
Sinking of the Titanic
- Richard Rabbit Brown
6.
Tennesse Girls
- Dykes Magic City Trio
7.
Shotgun Blues
- Bob Campbell
8.
Train on the Island
- Norman Edmonds / J.P. Nestor
9.
The Fault's in Me
- Four Wanderers
10.
The Tail of Haley's Comet
- Happy Hayseeds
11.
Wake up You Drowsey Sleeper
- Oaks Family
12.
How You Want Your Rollin' Done
- Louie Lasky
13.
Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss
- Frank Blevins and his Tar Heel Rattlers
14.
On the Road Again
- Memphis Jug Band
15.
The Dying Soldier
- Buell Kazee
16.
Voice Throwin' Blues
- Buddy Boy Hawkins
17.
Been on the Job Too Long
- Lonely Eagles / Wilmer Watts / Wilmer Watts & The Lonely Eagles
18.
Fannie Moore
- Ken Maynard
19.
I Got Your Ice Cold Nugrape
- Nugrape Twins
20.
The Old Miller's Will
- Carson Brothers & Sprinkle
21.
Skinner
- Winston Holmes / Winston Holmes / Charlie Turner
22.
How to Make Love
- Southern Moonlight Entertainers
These are 23 rare 78s from the 1920s and 1930s, chosen to illustrate the wide range of "early American rural music" that made its way onto disc in the early days of the recording industry. This will not get nearly as much press as Harry Smith'sAnthology of American Folk Music box, yet it's on par with that ballyhooed re-release as an overview of the roots of American roots music, so to speak. Styles vary from country blues and fiddle hoedowns to banjo music and jug bands. The Memphis Jug Band is the only name here that might be familiar to more than the most well-versed folk historians. Highlights include J.P. Nestor and Norman Edmonds' "Train on the Island," a frenetic string band gallop; the Four Wanderers' eerie gospel tune, "The Fault's in Me"; and Ken Maynard's "Fannie Moore," a direct predecessor of country music in its vocal phrasing.