The room smelled faintly of dust and lemon polish. Minh sat hunched over his laptop at midnight, the only light a halo across the keys. He’d come for the song — a particular recording his father used to play on rainy afternoons, guitar-warm and grainy with age. He remembered the tune’s crooked rhythm, the way his father tapped the table on the chorus like he was punctuating a secret.
Millions of links were generated during this era. A typical "chiasenhac old link" looked like:
http://chiasenhac.vn/nghe-si/Son-Tung-M-TP/[hash].html
Here is the truth about those old links, why they break, and how to salvage your lost playlist.
to collect song links from an album page and download them automatically Android Legacy App ChiaSeNhac.Com Album Downloader for Android (available via
As the song played, he read the page more closely. A small block of text credited a username: "for the nights we couldn't talk." Next to it, a comment from 2011 read, "RIP Hoa. Thanks for the upload." Minh's throat tightened. He hadn’t known his father’s friends by name — only snippets of stories, half-laughed and half-hidden. He scrolled through the comments like someone sifting through old photographs.
: You can view the site exactly as it looked in 2015–2018 by entering chiasenhac.vn Wayback Machine
The MP3 had an embedded tag: "Hoa — live — 2003." In the metadata, someone had typed a short line: "For those who stayed." Minh sat back and let the song finish. When the last chord faded, he felt foolishly, fiercely grateful to a stranger who’d uploaded a file twelve years ago and labeled it with a phrase that meant nothing to him and everything to someone else.
Thus, an old link isn't just a URL—it's a key to a forgotten digital archive.