Lucy Kaplansky has a voice you won’t forget. Clear, pure, and full of
tender feeling, it cuts through the noise of the world and pierces the
heart. The good news is, she’s bringing that voice back to the Freight for
an evening of incisive originals and carefully chosen covers. She’s “a
truly gifted performer,” according to the New Yorker, “with a bag of
enchanting songs,” and her latest album, Reunion, is “her best yet,” says
AcousticMusic.com, which praises “the emotionally unflinching stories, the
complete honesty of her lyrics and vocals, and then
there's the voice—the one that singers want backing them in harmony, and
the one fans want to hear front and center.”
Once upon a time, Lucy was a hip kid making the singer-songwriter scene in
New York with Suzanne Vega, Cliff Eberhardt, and the late Bill Morrissey.
It was easy, the New York Times said, “to
predict stardom for her.” Then she changed direction, earned a Ph.D. in
psychology, and began working with mentally ill adults. Music kept calling
her back, though, in the form of friends who wanted her to sing on their
albums, Shawn Colvin, Nancy Griffith, John Gorka. She went on to record
half a dozen outstanding solo albums – Ten Year Night and Every Single Day
won Best Pop Album of the Year from the Association for Independent
Music – and she also collaborated on two enormously entertaining and
popular “super group” projects, Cry, Cry, Cry with Dar Williams and
Richard Shindell, and Red Horse with John Gorka and Eliza Gilkyson, as well as a wonderful duet album with Richard, Tomorrow You're Going. Now
that Lucy’s a mother with a hip kid of her own, her music has only
deepened and grown more complex. Her show tonight promises a rich mix of
folk, roots rock, and country, all delivered with great warmth, humor, and
intelligence, in that unforgettable voice!