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 Location:  Home » Music Instruments » Baroque (c.1600-1750) » Baby Einstein: Baby NoahMay 17, 2008  


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Baby Einstein: Baby Noah
Baby Einstein: Baby Noah
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Creators: Laura Keopke, Anik Oulianine, Bill Weisbach, Baby Einstein Music Box Orchestra, Tom Nazziola
Label: Buena Vista
Category: Music

List Price: $6.98
Buy New: $3.50
You Save: $3.48 (50%)
Buy New/Used from $2.99

Sales Rank: 131395

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 861497
UPC: 050086149773
EAN: 0050086149773
ASIN: B000EUMPFO

Release Date: May 16, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Orchestra Warm-Up
  • Animal's Processional, Part I
  • Animal Processional, Part 2
  • The Elephant, The giraffe And The Butterfly
  • Koala's Hide And Seek
  • The Lizard Chase
  • From The Savannah
  • The Seahorse Water Ballet
  • Gorilla Talk
  • Wombat Dance
  • Puppy Play
  • The Ice Race
  • Feathered Friends
  • The Flamingo Family Ballet
  • Dolphin Party, Part 1
  • Dolphin Party, Part 2
  • Kangaroo Dance
  • Penguin Friends Folly
  • Morning: A Bright New Day
  • Lion's Pride
  • The Polar Bear Waltz
  • Building A Home, Building A Nest
  • Day's End: A Time For Rest
  • Finale: Animal Friends, Big And Small

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Parents have to admit: the brains of the folks behind Baby Einstein seem awfully big when it comes to scheming up additions to their charming series. Baby Noah, the latest, leads crib-bound musical explorers on a journey through a classical landscape teeming with wildlife. It's an unlikely sounding concept--doubting Thomas moms and dads can't be blamed for wondering if this is a forced and flimsy attempt at adhering to a theme, or if an armload of classical pieces with animal overtones actually exists--but it's pulled off with Einstein-ian intelligence and flair. Creatures roam the classical catalog with the frequency of silver-haired tuxedo-wearing conductors, the producers effectively put across, and there's no restrictions on their adaptability. Beethoven's Piano Sonata 15, Op. 28, Fourth Movement, thus becomes "The Elephant, The Giraffe, and The Butterfly"--you can almost hear the beating of wings and the clomping of hooves--and Scarlatti's excellent Sonata in E Major becomes an absolutely aquatic-sounding "Seahorse Water Ballet." As always, the Music Box Orchestra players pad their performances with lullaby gentleness. If snoozability is the name of your game when it comes to music to develop your baby's intelligence by, you'll find no ark more hospitable. --Tammy La Gorce


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