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.
Time Has Told Me
- Nick Drake
2.
River Man
- Nick Drake
3.
Three Hours
- Nick Drake
4.
Way to Blue
- Nick Drake
5.
Day Is Done
- Nick Drake
6.
Cello Song
- Nick Drake
7.
The Thoughts of Mary Jane
- Nick Drake
8.
Man in a Shed
- Nick Drake
9.
Fruit Tree
- Nick Drake
10.
Saturday Sun
- Nick Drake
11.
Introduction
- Nick Drake
12.
Hazey Jane II
- Nick Drake
13.
At the Chime of a City Clock
- Nick Drake
14.
One of These Things First
- Nick Drake
15.
Hazey Jane I
- Nick Drake
16.
Bryter Layter
- Nick Drake
17.
Fly
- Nick Drake
18.
Poor Boy
- Nick Drake
19.
Northern Sky
- Nick Drake
20.
Sunday
- Nick Drake
21.
Pink Moon
- Nick Drake
22.
Place to Be
- Nick Drake
23.
Road
- Nick Drake
24.
Which Will
- Nick Drake
25.
Horn
- Nick Drake
26.
Things Behind the Sun
- Nick Drake
27.
Know
- Nick Drake
28.
Free Ride
- Nick Drake
29.
Parasite
- Nick Drake
30.
Harvest Breed
- Nick Drake
31.
From the Morning
- Nick Drake
32.
Time of No Reply
- Nick Drake
33.
I Was Made to Love Magic
- Nick Drake
34.
Joey
- Nick Drake
35.
Clothes of Sand
- Nick Drake
36.
Man in a Shed [Demo Version]
- Nick Drake
37.
Mayfair
- Nick Drake
38.
Fly [Demo Version]
- Nick Drake
39.
The Thoughts of Mary Jane [Demo Version]
- Nick Drake
Rating: Genre: Folk Release Date: 06/18/2008 Run Time: 147:32
Fruit Tree is a four-disc box set featuring all three of Nick Drake's studio albums (Five Leaves Left, Bryter Layter, Pink Moon) and the rarities collection Time of No Reply. In other words, it contains every known recording Drake made during his brief lifetime, and listening to the set, the depth of his talent becomes abundantly clear. And the four discs are not overkill. The quality of Drake's songs was startlingly high, and anyone who purchases one disc will eventually need the other three albums, making Fruit Tree a logical way to acquire all of the records at once.