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The Ballad of Baby Doe
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The Ballad of Baby Doe

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The Ballad of Baby Doe
Music Price: $33.98
As of Jul 25 15:38 EDT (details)

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StudioDeutsche Grammophon
Release DateApril 20, 1999
UPC Code028946514825
Buy this item$33.98 at Amazon.com
As of Jul 25 15:38 EDT (details)
2 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording remastered
 

About The Ballad of Baby Doe

Despite its somewhat Disneyesque title, The Ballad of Baby Doe is one of the sturdiest American operas. Its riches-to-rags story of Colorado miner Horace Tabor has a great plot, excellent characters, real arias, and dynamic chorus scenes, and none of it sounds second hand in the least. The opera has an extremely inviting personality of its own. This recording by the New York City Opera is full of crackling fast tempos from conductor Emerson Buckley and great theatricality: right down to the minor characters, everybody knows what they're about. Beverly Sills, Walter Cassel, and Frances Bible all inhabit their roles completely. The one drawback is the recording quality, which is good to voices but mushy on the orchestra. To know what's really going on in the piece musically, one must hear the similarly well-sung but more relaxed 1996 recording made at the venue where the opera was premiered: Central City Opera in Colorado. --David Patrick Stearns Amazon.com

Tracks

Disc 1
  1. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene One - Opening
  2. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene One - 'It's A Bang-Up Job' (Tabor)
  3. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene One - 'Horace, What Is This?' (Augusta)
  4. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene One - 'I Beg Your Pardon' (Baby Doe)
  5. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Two - 'What A Lovely Evening'
  6. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Two - 'Willow, Where We Met Together' (Willow Song) (Baby Doe)
  7. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Two - 'Oh, Mr. Tabor!' (Baby Doe)
  8. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Two - 'Warm As The Autumn Light' (Tabor)
  9. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Three - 'Now, Where Do You Suppose?' (Augusta)
  10. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Three - 'Have You Seen Her?' (Augusta)
  11. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Three - 'What Are You Looking For, Horace?' (Augusta)
  12. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Four - 'Why, Mrs. Doe!'
  13. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Four - (Letter Song)
  14. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Four - 'Excuse Me' (Augusta)
  15. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Four - 'I Knew It Was Wrong' (Baby Doe)
  16. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Four - 'No! No! No!' (Baby Doe)
  17. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Seven - 'What Do You Intend To Do?' (Augusta)
  18. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Six - 'Everything Looks Beautiful'
  19. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Six - 'Gold Is A Fine Thing' (Silver Aria) (Baby Doe)
  20. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Act One: Scene Six - 'And I'll Show You Something Else' (Tabor)
Disc 2
  1. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: Opening
  2. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'The Fine Ladies' (Baby Doe)
  3. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Mama, Go Inside!' (Baby Doe)
  4. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Augusta, What Are You Doing Here?' (Tabor)
  5. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'I'll Raise You'
  6. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Turn Tail And Run!' (Tabor)
  7. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'La, La, La, La'
  8. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Good People Of Leadville'
  9. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Extra! Extra!'
  10. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Augusta! Augusta!' (Augusta)
  11. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Hey, Mister!'
  12. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'The Cattle Are Asleep' (Tabor)
  13. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Tabor Owns The Big Hotel' (Chorus)
  14. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Horace!' (Baby Doe)
  15. The Ballad Of Baby Doe: 'Always Through The Changing' (Baby Doe)

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User Reviews

Average user review: 5.0 (25 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteA few more thoughts . . .Quote
. . . and a clarification: Beverly Sills wasn't in the cast of the premiere in Colorado, but Walter Cassel and Frances Bible were. But Sills became Douglas Moore's favorite interpreter of the role of Baby Doe. Listening to this recording, it's easy to hear (and almost see, if you close your eyes and listen carefully) why. It's interesting that the divas (Renee Fleming and Eileen Di Tullio) who have recently recorded an aria from Ballad in recent albums have both chosen the letter aria "Dearest Mama," which is beautiful and interesting and, of course, integral to the plot, but not one of the two most famous arias from the opera, "Willow, where we met together" or "Always through the changing." Perhaps the shadow of Sills is still too intimidating, fifty years later, even for those two most accomplished artists. And a final reflection, notice despite the beauty of the music, and the seeming folksong-like lyrics, how tragic, how forshadowing of the future, the words of the first aria, the Willow Song, actually are. January 25, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteThe BEST Testament to Beverly Sills' MemoryQuote
With this recording, Ms Sills set her mark forever on the world of opera. Period!

Of all the recordings that she made, this one, "The Ballad of Baby Doe", is the one that brings back the most endearing memories of this wonderfully talented lady.

It was her first Big Hit role in her new-found home (New York City Opera Company); it also, just happens to be a Totally American story, and creation, written by Douglas Moore.

Here we have Ms Sills in the freshness of her youth, in a brand new role, one that few have been able to fill after her sparkling interpretation. I think it fair to say that she will "always" be Baby Doe.

This recording is a true jem, as all previous reviewers, and many others will tell you. There is NO other work like this one. It is so fresh, lovely, and of course, tragic at the same time.

Everything about this recording is "small and intimate" as this story should be presented. And, luckily, the forces behind getting this recording made, did not have access to large forces and lots of technological wizardry-type equipment and facilities to do this recording in. This makes it all the more wonderful, as I said, small and intimate.

Beverly Sills, Frances Bible, and Walter Cassell had sung this opera together, and had "lived" in their parts long enough to become real breathing characters, characters that you really do care about, and get drawn in by. I defy anyone not to become emotional when Baby Doe sings the "Willow Song", or not to become teary with her final "Always Through The Changing". Frances Bible's stiffly starched Augusta Tabor is so three dimensional that she could walk right into the room with you! And, Walter Cassell's portrail of Horace Tabor will probably never be sung with the "totally lived in" feel that he brings to the role.

From all my thousands of opera recordings, this one gets picked FIRST if I want to listen to an American work. It also gets picked FIRST when I just want to marvel at Beverly Sills' truly most-gorgeous voice at the peak of her youthful freshness and "innocence" (before she had "grown up" in all those other roles).

Deutsche Grammophone has truly done us all a great favor by bringing forward all of the ABC and previous recordings that Ms Sills made prior to her move to EMI, and, truly, we are most thankful for the beautiful remastering and refurbushing of this wonderful Great American Work by Douglas Moore. Bravo, DG!, and of course, certainly, Bravo/Brava to Ms Sills, Ms Bible, Mr Cassell, and to Emerson Buckley for holding it all together. A truly landmark recording, and one that should be on your shelves. ~operabruin July 5, 2007

rating: 5 QuoteStill endearing fifty years onQuote
I wholeheartedly agree with the universal praise for this recording and have seen a performance at the Central City Opera House, a small Victorian gem in the middle of a touristy mining town north of Denver. In that setting, Baby Doe comes off at its best, since the music really is too simple for grand opera, abouanding in barely disguised folk songs and Top 40 harmonies. The cast carries the day, with total conviction from the two leads, Sills and Cassel. The role of Augusta Tabor is almost as large, and Frances Bible sings magnificently. All deserve high praise for their excellent, clear English diction, a rare thing and hard to achieve.

There are drawbacks, most of them minor in regard to the total impact. The major flaw is the dated sound, never good even for its day, that comes close to shattering and peaking any time the music grows louder than mezzo forte. Sills sings at her purest and freshest, but the microphone distortion cramps the voice considerably. A shame DG couldn't remaster the original tapes to remove so much glare. The second flaw is the routine but vigorous conducting of Emerson Buckley; a better conductor could have made the choral passages sound better than a college musical. These blemishes aside, Baby Doe is an American classic and has survived after many, many of its rivals have long ago faded away. April 15, 2007

rating: 5 QuoteBeverly Sills First Hit RoleQuote
This is the opera that made Beverly Sills an opera star. She was 29 when she first performed it with the New York City Opera in 1958. Written in 1955 by Douglas Moore, the opera is based on the true story of the already-married Colorado silver magnate Horace Tabor and the young miner's wife, Baby (Mrs. Elizabeth) Doe, with whom he fell in love. Moore writes very much in the folk-opera idiom of American opera in the mid-50s, (Carlisle Floyd's "Susannah" comes to mind), and as a result the music is extremely accessible and full of lovely melodies, particularly in the music written for Baby Doe, such as the "Willow Song" and the "Letter Song" in the first act.
Sills herself always considered the role of Baby Doe the role she most inhabited, and she is in simply sumptuous voice on this recording. She is ably supported by the underrated American baritone Walter Cassel as Horace Tabor, and by the New York City Opera's leading mezzo-soprano, Frances Bible, in the surprisingly sympathetic role of Augusta, Horace's self-righteous wife. Julius Rudel conducts the New York City Opera orchestra with his usual steady hand, and the sound quality of this 1959 recording is excellent. Anyone who enjoys American opera should add this to their collection, and for fans of Beverly Sills, this is a "must have". September 3, 2005

rating: 5 QuoteI wish I could give this recording a fifteen star rating!Quote
First of all, I must state that I have loved this recording for three plus decades.
I have LP copies of it on MGM, Heliodor, and DGG pressings.
But I am one who has been waiting for years to find it released on CD. When the CD set finally came out, I was beside myself with joy.

This is the Baby Doe to have.

Someone mentioned the 1996 CD recording of Baby Doe, which was recorded in the Central City Opera House.
That's a very good recording. The entire cast is/are wonderful.
And that recording includes a few bars(in the first act) which are cut from the Sills Baby Doe.

But as fine as the 1996 recording is; it would be impossible to top or even match Cassel, Sills, and Bible as the Tabor love triangle.

I attended one of the 1996 Central City Opera Baby Doe performances. I was elated to see/hear the opera performed in that glorious old house.
But I have to admit that the acoustic ambiance of the Central City Opera House was a bit tubby and dry (acoustically). The tubby and dry ambiance of the 1996 Baby Doe recording is one of the reasons I prefer the Sills recording.

Anyway.

I have made two pilgrimages to Leadville. The Tabor Grand Opera House (which is in desperate need of funds for restoration) is still standing and in business.
The Clarendon Hotel (which was adjacent to the Tabor Grand) was torn down decades ago (although evidence of the Tabor cat walk from the Tabor Grand to the Clarendon is still extant).

Both times I visited Leadville, standing on the stage of the Tabor Grand left me speechless.

But my two visits to Baby Doe's cabin at the Matchless Mine devastated me.

Both times I stood in the "cold and narrow house" in which Baby Doe died so emotionally overwhelmed me that I had to step outside. I didn't want the rest of the tourees to see me weeping.

I couldn't help reacting that way. As I stood in Baby's cabin, her final aria , "Always Through the Changing" (as sung by Sills) kept running through my mind.

For those who have not heard this Opera (especially the Sills recording) you all really must listen to it.
It's one of the few truly great American Operas.

Moore's score is glorious. The Latouche libretto is outstanding.
And the story of Baby Doe (upon which the opera is based) is well represented (with a few dramatic alterations) in the opera. June 15, 2004

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