Decca Records recorded six selections (on three 10-inch 78-RPM records) in 1945. The recording featured
Eileen Farrell,
Wilbur Evans, and
Felix Knight with a chorus and orchestra conducted by Jay Blackton. This album was reissued on one side of a 12-inch Lp (
Babes in Toyland was on the reverse) in 1957. This edition stayed in print until 1969. After a long absence from the catalogue,
Decca Broadway reissued the complete album on CD (again paired with
Babes) in 2002. Also in 1945,
RCA Victor issued an album based on the hit Broadway revival but using studio singers (and
Al Goodman's orchestra) instead of the Broadway cast. These eight highlights were issued on Lp by RCA Victor (1951) and on their budget label RCA Camden (1958) but have been unavailable in any format since 1960. A Capitol album starring
Gordon MacRae was issued as part of a series of recordings based on MacRae's popular Railroad Hour program, which featured potted operettas and musicals. It was conducted by
Carmen Dragon. The first release in 1954 was a 10-inch LP [Capitol Records L-530, and FBF-530 (2xEP Box-Set]. It was reissued in 1955 on one side of a 12-inch LP with
Naughty Marietta on the reverse [Capitol T-551]. This version was released on CD in 2008 as
The Music of Victor Herbert (Anteater Records AECD-1004), along with selections from
Naughty Marietta and
Sweethearts. A stereo recording was made by Reader's Digest for their 1963 album
Treasury of Great Operettas. Each of the 18 operettas in the set is condensed to fill one LP side.
The Red Mill selections from Reader's Digest have also been re-released on CD. In the 1920s, Chandler Goldwaithe "recorded" selections from
The Red Mill on a paper roll for use in an E. M. Skinner player organ. A CD of this roll playing on a 1929 Skinner organ was released by JAV Recordings in 2001. In 2001 the
Ohio Light Opera (OLO) commissioned a new critical edition of the opera from
Quade Winter, based on the composer's original manuscripts in the
Library of Congress. A complete recording of this edition by OLO was issued by
Albany Records the same year. ==Notes==