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Lucy Kaplansky

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Birth name
  
Lucy Kaplansky

Years active
  
1978–present

Origin
  
Chicago, Illinois, US

Associated acts
  
Cry Cry Cry


Genres
  
Folk Singer-songwriter

Name
  
Lucy Kaplansky

Spouse
  
Richard Litvin

Lucy Kaplansky Lucy Kaplansky


Born
  
February 16, 1960 (age 64) (
1960-02-16
)

Role
  
Musician · lucykaplansky.com

Profiles


Instruments
  
Vocals, Guitar, Piano

Lucy kaplansky this morning i am born again official video


Lucy Kaplansky (born February 16, 1960) is an American folk musician based in New York City. Kaplansky has a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Yeshiva University. Kaplansky plays guitar, mandolin, and piano.

Contents

Lucy kaplansky this morning i am born again official video preview


Life and career

Lucy Kaplansky Lucy Kaplansky Superplayer

Kaplansky was originally from Chicago; her father was the noted mathematician Irving Kaplansky (1917-2006). Later, she would sometimes perform math-related songs composed by her father, who was also an accomplished pianist. At the age of 18, she decided not to go to college, but moved to New York City, where she became involved in the city's folk music scene, particularly around Greenwich Village, where she played with, among others, Suzanne Vega, Shawn Colvin and Richard Shindell.

Lucy Kaplansky Lucy Kaplansky quotScavengerquot Official Video YouTube

In 1983, she decided to become a psychologist, enrolling at Yeshiva University. She continued playing music while doing her PhD, and began to have some success as part of a duo with Colvin. When they began to attract record company interest, Kaplansky declined, choosing instead to set up a private practice and become a staff psychologist at a New York hospital. For several years, she concentrated largely on this work, and played little in the way of concerts. She still did some session work, such as singing backing vocals in the studio for Suzanne Vega.

By the early 1990s she found herself increasingly drawn back to music. Colvin, who by this time had experienced some commercial success, offered to produce an album for her. The result, The Tide, a mixture of her own songs and several covers, was released by Red House Records in 1994. At this time, she decided to give up her psychology practice and return to music full-time. More albums have followed.

In 1998 Kaplansky joined with Dar Williams and Richard Shindell to form the folk group Cry Cry Cry; they made an album and toured at length before going their separate ways. Her Ten Year Night album in 1999 won rave reviews and boosted her popularity, leading to performances on CBS-TV. Her album, The Red Thread has a song about her experience of being a New Yorker on 9-11. Coincidentally, in August, 2001, Kaplansky sang harmony with John Gorka in a concert on the World Trade Center plaza.

She is a semi-regular collaborator with John Gorka and Nanci Griffith.

Solo releases

  • The Tide (1994, re-released 2005)
  • Flesh and Bone (1996)
  • Ten Year Night (1999)
  • Every Single Day (2001)
  • The Red Thread (2004)
  • Over the Hills (2007)
  • Kaplansky sings Kaplansky EP available at live shows (2011)
  • Reunion (2012)
  • Collaborations

  • The Song Project (1985) with Frank Christian, Tom Intondi, and Martha Hogen
  • Cry Cry Cry (1998) with Dar Williams and Richard Shindell
  • Red Horse (July 13, 2010) with John Gorka and Eliza Gilkyson
  • Tomorrow You're Going (2014) with Richard Shindell (The Pine Hill Project)
  • Appears on

  • "It Ain't Me, Babe" – on the album "A Nod to Bob: An Artists' Tribute to Bob Dylan on His 60th Birthday" (2001)- various Dylan songs by various artists. Similarly, "Every Grain of Sand" on "Nod to Bob 2" (2011).
  • References

    Lucy Kaplansky Wikipedia