Most, if not all, Pat Barber recordings are sibilant. She is sibilant even live. Don't worry about it. Never tune your entire system to a specific recording.
Sibilance is nasty. The higher the resolution of your system, the worse it is when it comes to sibilance. The only way to deal with it is to try to have your system render it in the most natural way. Source components, cables, acoustic treatment, power conditioning all can change it. The most difficult part is taming sibilance if you have metal dome tweeters. But it is still possible.
I found that cables do affect sibilance. You can not get rid of it completely, but you can change its signature and make it less annoying. I found that with Acoustic Zen Silver Ref II interconnects and Satori Shotgun speaker cables, the level of sibilance in my system was high and it was annoying becuase it had this artificial feel to it. I changed the cables to Purist Audio 20th Anniversary Aqueous and the sibilance sounds much more natural. The system still reproduces sibilance because it is on the recording. But how it reproduces it is a totally different matter. It is much more tollerable now and does not feel like a razor blade on your ear drum.
But essentially, when you bring your system to a certain level of resolution, there is no getting rid of faults in the recordings. It just doesn't work that way.
Some recordings with excess sibilance that I can think of is "Hell Freezes Over" by Eagles, "All for You" by Diana Krall. Louis Armstrong sounds sibilant on most of the recordings. Some of the Sinatra remasters.
Just realize that if it's on the recording, you will hear it.
Good luck!