Harry Gibson | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Harry Raab |
Born | New York City, U.S. | June 27, 1915
Died | May 3, 1991 75) Brawley, California, U.S. | (aged
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation(s) | Musician, singer, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Piano, vocals |
Years active | 1944–1980s |
Labels | Musicraft, V-Disc |
Harry "The Hipster" Gibson (June 27, 1915 – May 3, 1991),[1] born Harry Raab, was an American jazz pianist, singer, and songwriter.[2] He played New York style stride piano and boogie woogie while singing in a wild, unrestrained style. His music career began in the late 1920s, when, under his real name, he played stride piano in Dixieland jazz bands in Harlem. He continued to perform there throughout the 1930s, adding the barrelhouse boogie of the time to his repertoire.
Early life
Gibson was Jewish.[3] He came from a musical family[3] that operated a player piano repair shop.[4] He began playing piano in the 1920s as a child, in the Bronx and Harlem.[5] His first professional piano gig was at age 13 with his uncle's orchestra.[3] He began playing boogie woogie and talking in a jive style.[5] He was invited into black speakeasies in Harlem to play piano while still a teenager.[5]
Career
In the 1930s, after Prohibition ended, Gibson played regularly in Harlem nightclubs.[5] He punctuated his piano stylings with a running line of jive patter, which can be traced directly to recordings of the late-1930s jazz personality Tempo King (1915-1939), particularly "I'll Sing You a Thousand Love Songs" with its enthusiastic exclamations. After King's death in June 1939, Gibson made King's vocal mannerisms his own.
Gibson was fond of playing Fats Waller tunes, and when Waller heard Gibson in a club in Harlem in 1939, he hired him to be his relief pianist at club dates. Between 1939 and 1945, Gibson played at Manhattan jazz clubs on 52nd Street ("Swing Street"), most notably the Three Deuces, run by Irving Alexander,[6] and Leon and Eddie's run by Leon Enkin and Eddie Davis. During one audition for a nightclub engagement, where he played piano for a girl singer, he gave his true name of Harry Raab. The club owner insisted on a "showbiz" name, shouting, "I'm calling you two The Gibsons!" Harry adopted Gibson as his professional name.
In the 1940s, Gibson was known for writing unusual songs considered ahead of their time. He was also known for his unique, wild singing style, his energetic and unorthodox piano styles, and his intricate mixture of hardcore, gutbucket boogie rhythms with ragtime, stride and jazz piano styles. He took the boogie woogie beat of his predecessors, but he made it frantic, similar to the rock and roll music of the 1950s.[7] Examples of his wild style are found in "Riot in Boogie" and "Barrelhouse Boogie". An example of his strange singing style is "The Baby and the Pup." Other songs that he recorded were "Handsome Harry, the Hipster," "I Stay Brown All Year 'Round," 4-F Ferdinand the Frantic Freak," "Get Your Juices at the Deuces" and "Stop That Dancin' Up There."
Gibson recorded often, but there are very few visual examples of his work. In 1944, he filmed three songs in New York for the Soundies film jukeboxes, and he went to Hollywood in 1946 to appear as himself in the feature-length film musical Junior Prom. He preceded white rock-and-rollers by a decade: the Soundies he recorded are similar to Jerry Lee Lewis's raucous piano numbers of the 1950s.[8]
Like Mezz Mezzrow, Gibson consciously abandoned his ethnicity to adopt black music and culture. He grew up near Harlem in New York City, and his constant use of black jive talk was not an affectation; it was something he picked up from his fellow musicians. His song "I Stay Brown All Year Round" is based on this.[9] In his autobiography, he claimed he coined the term hipster between 1939 and 1945 when he was performing on Swing Street, and he started using "Harry the Hipster" as his stage name.[6]
Serious musician
Gibson's wild-man theatrics belied the fact that he was also a highly trained classical musician. While working on "Swing Street" at night, he was a fellow at the Juilliard Graduate School during the day.[10][11]
Gibson was invited to perform at Carnegie Hall, for a jazz concert held on December 2, 1944. Hosted by Eddie Condon, the program featured many celebrities from the jazz world. Gibson performed a serious rendition of Bix Beiderbecke's piano piece "In a Mist." Downbeat Magazine reviewed the concert, singling out Gibson for special praise. A recording contract with Musicraft Records followed, resulting in the hit album "Boogie Woogie in Blue."
Notoriety
He recorded "Who Put the Benzedrine in Mrs. Murphy's Ovaltine?", released in January 1946. Radio stations across America refused to play it, and he was blacklisted in the music industry.[12] Although his mainstream movie appearance in Junior Prom was released that year, it could not overcome the notoriety of the "Benzedrine" record. His own drug use led to his decline, and with the rising popularity of young rock-and-roll musicians among teenagers in the 1950s, older musicians were not in demand. He spent time in Miami during the 1950s, and before Christmas 1956 appeared at the Ball & Chain nightclub in Miami on the same bill with Billie Holiday.
In the 1960s, when Gibson saw the success of the Beatles, he switched to rock and roll. By the 1970s, he was playing hard rock, blues, bop, novelty songs and a few songs that mixed ragtime with rock and roll. His hipster act became a hippie act. His old records were revived on the Dr. Demento radio show, particularly "Benzedrine", which was included on the 1975 compilation album Dr. Demento's Delights.
His comeback resulted in three more albums: Harry the Hipster Digs Christmas, Everybody's Crazy but Me, (its title taken from the lyrics of "Stop That Dancin' Up There") (Progressive, 1986), and Who Put the Benzedrine in Mrs. Murphy's Ovaltine (Delmark, 1989).[6] The latter two feature jazz, blues, ragtime, and rock and roll songs about reefer, nude bathing, hippie communes, strip clubs, male chauvinists, "rocking the 88s", and Shirley MacLaine.
Gibson may have been the only jazz pianist of the 1930s and 1940s to go on to play in rock bands in the 1970s and 1980s. The only constants were his tendency to play hard-rocking boogie woogie and his tongue-in-cheek references to drug use. In 1991, shortly before his death, his family filmed a biographical featurette on his life and music, Boogie in Blue, published as a VHS video that year.
Gibson died from a self-inflicted gunshot on May 3, 1991, after suffering from congestive heart failure. He was 75.[1]
Discography
- Boogie Woogie in Blue (Musicraft, 1984; reissue of 1944 album)
- Harry the Hipster Digs Christmas (Totem, 1976; amateur recordings)
- Everybody's Crazy but Me (Progressive, 1986; new recordings)
- Who Put the Benzedrine in Mrs. Murphy's Ovaltine? (Delmark, 1996; recorded in 1989)
- Rockin' Rhythm (Sutton; piano album includes three Harry Gibson 78s from the 1940s)
Audio samples
- (30 seconds of) "Barrelhouse Boogie"
- (30 seconds of) "Riot In Boogie"
- (30 seconds of) "The Baby and The Pup"
- (1 minute of) "Hipster's Boogie"
References
- 1 2 Wright, Morgan. "Blues and Rhythm in the Company of a Legend". Hyzercreek.com. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
- ↑ Harry Gibson, Flavin Feller (December 1995). Boogie in Blue (Videotape). Rhapsody Films.
- 1 2 3 "Harry The Hipster Gibson - Investments into his Success". www.hyzercreek.com. Retrieved September 23, 2021.
- ↑ "Blues and Rhythm in the Company of a Legend - moving Jazz to the Spotlight". www.hyzercreek.com. Retrieved September 23, 2021.
- 1 2 3 4 "Harry 'The Hipster' Gibson". IMDb. Retrieved September 23, 2021.
- 1 2 3 Gibson, Harry (1986). "Harry The Hipster Autobiography - from Los Angeles to NYC, Fans, Attorneys, and Musicians praise him". Hyzer Creek. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
- ↑ Yanow, Scott (2003). Jazz on Record. San Francisco, California: Backbeat. p. 277. ISBN 978-0879307554.
- ↑ Yanow, Scott (2004). Jazz on Film: The Complete Story of the Musicians & Music Onscreen. San Francisco, California: Backbheat Books. p. 28. ISBN 978-0879307837.
- ↑ Lopes, Paul (2002). The Rise of a Jazz Art World ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-0521000390.
- ↑ Boogie Woogie in Blue (Media notes). Harry Gibson. Musicraft Records. 1944.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ↑ Cooper, Kim; Smay, David, eds. (2005). Lost in the Grooves: Scram's Capricious Guide to the Music You Missed. New York: Routledge. pp. 98–99. ISBN 0-415-96998-0.
- ↑ Statement by drummer Tom Magee in movie Boogie in Blue