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.
Reels: The Jolly Seven/The Rascal on the Haystack/Bonkers in Yonkers
- Cherish the Ladies
2.
Sweet Thames Flow Softly
- Cherish the Ladies
3.
Jigs: Carolan's Favorite Jig/The Rakes of Cashel/Highland March in ...
- Cherish the Ladies
4.
Bogie's Bonnie Belle
- Cherish the Ladies
5.
Woman of the House Medley: The Fairy Queen/The Gooseberry ...
- Cherish the Ladies
6.
The Hills of New Zealand
- Cherish the Ladies
7.
Betsy Belle and Mary Gray
- Cherish the Ladies
8.
Fair and Tender Ladies
- Cherish the Ladies
9.
Slip Jigs: Paddy O' Snap/Robin Kelegher/The Cover of Cork
- Cherish the Ladies
10.
The Green Fields of Canada
- Cherish the Ladies
11.
Reels: The Old Maids of Galway/The Sunny Banks/The Flooded Road to ...
- Cherish the Ladies
Cherish the Ladies' tenth studio album is reliable without being redundant, soft without seeming slight, and as rollicking as it is sentimental. Joined by a small army of guests that read like Celtic and singer/songwriter royalty (Sharon Shannon/Triona Ni Dhomhnaill/Phil Cunningham/Kate Rusby/Eddi Reader), the Ladies have crafted a beautiful set that harks back to their 1992 debut. The impossibly lovely voice of Heidi Talbot -- it's like standing between Alison Krauss and Kirsty MacColl singing at the same time -- carries each ballad, both traditional ("Green Fields of Canada,""Bogie's Bonnie Belle") and contemporary ("Sweet Thames Flow Softly"), with such effortlessness that it's a wonder she even has to move her mouth, while the band makes high-octane instrumentals like "Jigs: Carolan's Favorite Jig/The Rakes of Cashel/Highland March in Oscar & Malvina" and the ferocious title track sound like the very forces of nature in human form.