In the 1930s, after Prohibition ended, Gibson played regularly in Harlem nightclubs. Gibson was fond of playing Fats Waller tunes, and when Waller heard Gibson in a club in Harlem in 1939 he hired Gibson 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, 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. Examples of his wild style are found in "Riot in Boogie" and "Barrelhouse Boogie". 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. 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. 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. ==Classical music work==