<P> 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). Those two include some jazz, blues, ragtime, and rock and roll songs about reefer, nude bathing, hippie communes, strip clubs, male chauvinists, "rocking the 88s", and Shirley MacLaine . </P> <P> Gibson may have been the only pianist of the 1930s and 1940s to go on to play in blues bands in the 1970s and 1980s . Unlike his 1940s contemporaries, most of whom continued to play the same music for decades, he gradually shifted gears from the 1940s to the 1970s, switching from jazz to rock . 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, Gibson's family made a biographical movie short on his life and music: Boogie in Blue, published as a VHS video that year . </P> <P> Suffering from congestive heart failure, and wanting to avoid further health complications from illness, Gibson committed suicide by a self - inflicted gunshot on May 3, 1991 . </P> <Ul> <Li> Boogie Woogie in Blue (1944) </Li> <Li> Harry The Hipster Digs Christmas (1976) </Li> <Li> Everybody's Crazy But Me (1986) </Li> <Li> Rockin' Rhythm </Li> </Ul>

Who put the benzedrine in mrs. murphy's ovaltine lyrics