If you are trying to find the artist or source of this specific file, you can try the following:

: The "(1)" at the end indicates that this file is a duplicate copy on your device—meaning the same file was downloaded twice, and your operating system renamed the second version to avoid overwriting the first. Identifying the Content

: Play the file near a device running Shazam or use Google Assistant's "Search a song" feature to see if it's a registered track.

: If you encountered this file name as a link on a suspicious website or as an unexpected email attachment, do not open it. MP3 files are generally safe, but "double extensions" (e.g., .mp3.exe ) are common tactics for spreading malware.

: Right-click the file, select Properties (Windows) or Get Info (Mac), and look at the "Details" or "Metadata" tab. This often lists the Artist, Album, and Year.

: If you found this in your downloads folder and don't remember where it came from, check your browser history for the date the file was created to see which website you were visiting at that time.

: Websites like Epidemic Sound, Audio Network, or Pond5 often use numeric strings to track tracks. If you downloaded this from a stock music site, the "15700" is how the database identifies that specific composition.

: Titles like "Cradle Your Soul" are extremely common in ambient, New Age, or guided meditation catalogs. The number "15700" is likely a catalog ID or a timestamp used by a specific distributor or royalty-free music library.