
Pianist Robi Botos on Oscar Peterson's enduring legacy as centennial tour continues
OSAKA – Growing up in Budapest, Robi Botos and his father, who was a jazz enthusiast, bonded over Oscar Peterson's music, which he says they discovered through the contraband of the few albums that made it past the ban on jazz music under Soviet control of Hungary.
'He had such a personality in his music and he had so much to offer,' said Botos, the pianist in the Oscar Peterson Centennial Quartet, which this year is honouring the jazz legend with performances in Canada and abroad, 100 years after he was born.
'But there was also this ability to really connect with people. And if you go to the smallest village, when we talk about jazz piano, they all know who Oscar is and they're going to call him the greatest.'
Upcoming shows on the tour include a celebration at Toronto's Massey Hall on Saturday, summer jazz festivals in Rochester, N.Y. and Montreal, and more than two dozen others through to the end of the year.
A standout for the quartet – which includes Winnipeg-bred bassist Mike Downes, Montreal-born drummer Jim Doxas and Swedish guitarist Ulf Wakenius, who played with Peterson's quartet before he died – was last Friday's performance in Osaka with the National Arts Centre Orchestra, says Botos, who immigrated to Toronto age 20.
At home and abroad, Oscar Peterson's legacy lives on.
Peterson's appearances between 1953 and 1983 in Japan helped cultivate an enthusiastic fan base. His first appearance in the country was with the 'Jazz at the Philharmonic' concert series and he made Tokyo a frequent stop in his touring circuit, even recording the famous 'Return to Happiness' live album there in 1983.
Channeling the music of a legendary pianist is a tall order, one that's made more challenging by Botos' creative impulse to insert his own artistry into Peterson's music.
Botos says it helps that he got some advice on the matter from Peterson himself. The two met after Botos won first place in the 2004 Montreux Jazz Festival's solo piano competition. The prize included opening for one of the following year's headliners, who turned out to be Peterson.
'I don't think he ever had opening acts, let alone a young pianist. But he was really beautiful and came and listened to me and his words were beautiful. He kind of gave me the green light to do my thing.'
Botos later became a mentee of Peterson's and has since built his own reputation as a stalwart of Canadian jazz, winning the TD Grand Jazz Award at the Montreal International Jazz Festival and a Juno Award for Best Jazz Album of the Year in 2016.
Botos and his band managed to find their own footing throughout the concert in Osaka alongside a slimmed down orchestra that focused on the brass section.
The highlight was Peterson's 'Hymn to Freedom,' a 1962 composition embraced as a musical symbol of the Civil Rights Movement.
Weekly
A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene.
The version of 'Hymn' performed for this concert was arranged by Downes and orchestrated by Montreal-based composer Chris LaRosa. For the vocal component, the orchestra and quartet were joined by members of Sistema New Brunswick, El Sistema Japan's Tokyo Children's Ensemble and Ottawa's OrKidstra Music Ensemble, all of which provide children from equity-deserving communities the opportunity to create music together.
In this 'Hymn,' Nelson McDougall hears proof that Peterson's oeuvre rises above genre, and even above music.
'He was able to communicate, to engage, to connect with audiences around the world,' said McDougall, managing director of NACO.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 13, 2025.
Michael Zarathus-Cook is a Toronto-based freelance writer, the chief editor of 'Cannopy Magazine,' and a medical student at the University of Toronto. The National Arts Centre sponsored his trip to Japan.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
12 hours ago
- CBC
He's learning to dance powwow and it led to much more
CBC Indigenous reporter Stefan Richard gets ready to dance in his first powwow, Manito Ahbee, in Winnipeg.


Toronto Star
19 hours ago
- Toronto Star
‘We will not go anywhere': Toronto Pride celebrations continue despite financial woes
TORONTO - A Toronto-born drag king says he has performed in Pride festivals worldwide, but there is one thing that keeps bringing him back to the city. 'There's so many different people that come from all over the world to Toronto Pride because it feels like everyone is welcome,' said the artist who performs under the name Krēme Inakuchi.


CTV News
a day ago
- CTV News
‘How have we never seen it?': Filmmakers searching for missing guitar from ‘Back to the Future'
Michael J. Fox plays a Gibson ES-345 guitar during a climactic scene in the 1985 film 'Back to the Future.' (Universal Studios/YouTube) Todd Harapiak will never forget the first time he saw 'Back to the Future'. The former Manitoban was a teenager in 1985 when the movie was first released. He drove from his home in Cowan—about five hours north of Winnipeg—to sit in the Garrick Theatre and watch Marty McFly travel back in time to 1955 and try to save his parents' relationship to ensure he still exists in the future. 'It was such a pivotal moment in our lives,' Harapiak said in a recent interview, noting he watched the movie over and over when it was eventually released on home video. 'The movie really spoke to me.' Harapiak now lives in Los Angeles, where he works for Gibson Guitars as its media director. Superfans will remember it was a Gibson guitar—specifically an ES-345—that Michael J. Fox used to play 'Johnny B. Goode' at the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance, prompting Marvin Berry to call his cousin Chuck to listen to 'that new sound you're looking for.' Gibson's director of brand experience Mark Agnesi believes the scene spurred many to pick up the instrument themselves. '(Michael J. Fox) wasn't in a band and didn't have a hit record, so he kind of gets passed over on the lists of influential guitar players, but he literally inspired an entire generation to play the guitar,' he said. Michael J Fox In 'Back To The Future' Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) plays 'Johnny B. Goode' at the Enchantment Under The Sea Dance in the 1985 film 'Back to the Future.' (Universal Studios/YouTube) (Photo) () Despite being used in the memorable scene, the guitar itself has been missing in action for decades, and nobody knows where it is. Harapiak, Agnesi and filmmaker Doc Crotzer have spent the past six years trying to find it. The search is the subject of a documentary called 'Lost to the Future,' which includes interviews with cast members to mark the 40th anniversary of 'Back to the Future.' Their search would probably be easier if they had access to a time-travelling DeLorean. 'We could go back and grab the guitar and put it somewhere for safekeeping,' Crotzer said. 'This guitar has never surfaced' Here's what is known about the guitar. It was a cherry red Gibson ES-345, believed to be from 1960 or 1961. It was rented from Norman's Rare Guitars in Tarzana, Cali. in 1985 for the filming of 'Back to The Future.' The guitar was returned to the store after filming, but may have been sold at some point. But to whom is unknown. Back To The Future Guitar A Gibson model ES-345 guitar is seen June 5, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV) (George Walker IV/AP) 'We're not in the era of digital receipts; we're not in the era of things being tracked the way they inherently are now,' Crotzer said. Coincidentally, Agnesi was the general manager of Norman's Rare Guitars from 2009 to 2019 and remembers spending hours looking for the guitar, to no avail. 'All I know is there's been massive guitar displays at the Metropolitan Museum, Hard Rock Cafes, Rock and Roll Hall of Fames - all of these different things, and this guitar has never surfaced,' he said. 'It's one of the most important guitars ever, definitely the most important guitar of our generation. How have we never seen it?' The guitar does have one distinctive feature that sets it apart from other similar guitars. Agnesi said the ES-345 typically has split parallelogram inlays—small blocks of wood between all the fret marks. The 12th fret on the guitar in the movie doesn't have a split inlay. Having exhausted all options, the group has created a website to get the word out on their plans for the movie and to get tips from people around the world about where the guitar might be. They received hundreds in the first week and will begin sifting through them to find their next lead. The search is a labour of love from three people with a shared passion for the classic film. 'As hard as it is when you're talking about trying to find a needle in a haystack that's the size of the globe, we've been so fortunate to have these moments where we all kind of look around at each other, saying to each other, 'Can you believe we're doing this?'' Crotzer said. 'It's been really special in that way, because even though we each experienced 'Back to the Future' individually as kids, there is this like common bond and this common experience of what the movie did for us that the three of us feel together.' Anyone with tips can reach out to the group on the 'Lost to the Future' website.