***They're running stop signs at SW 29th and Indian Hills today....a 4-way stop put in because of increased traffic due to the SW Urish at 21st closure.....our cameras spotted a lot of people running the 29th street stop.****Speaking of 21st and Urish....the debate continues.....Sheriff's deputies are no longer blocking access to a nearby neighborhood as drivers try to find a way to get around the area. Stephanie Ramos has the story.***A TPD officer shot 2 pit bulls....one fatally....after the dogs menaced a teacher and student at Topeka Collegiate School this morning and then came at the officer.***We're at the State Law Enforcement Memorial to honor fallen officers....Brian Dorman on that story.***Bike Shop owner Jerry Morgan continues his battle to keep his shop in a re-development area......now the city has cited him for his "Johnny on the Job" porta potty....huh???!!.***We're in Lawrence today for the graduation of some 196 students completing studies at the Haskell Indian Nations University.***In Sports, we're in Emporia, for a 2nd round Emporia State softball game.***And in Weather.....shouldn't be too wet the rest of today.....but afternoon Saturday.....grab the umbrella.***We have those stories and much more coming up on 13 News at 4, 5 and 6.
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Jazz Great Oscar Peterson Dies Save Email Print
Posted: 4:17 PM Dec 29, 2007
Last Updated: 4:17 PM Dec 29, 2007

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(AP) Oscar Peterson, whose early talent, speedy fingers and musical genius made him one of the world's best known jazz pianists, has died. He was 82.

Peterson died at his home in the Toronto suburb of Mississauga on Sunday, said Oliver Jones, a family friend and jazz musician. He said Peterson's wife and daughter were with him during his final moments. The cause of death was kidney failure, said Mississauga's mayor, Hazel McCallion.

"He's been going downhill in the last few months," McCallion said, calling Peterson a "very close friend."

During an illustrious career spanning seven decades, Peterson played with some of the biggest names in jazz, including Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie and Dizzy Gillespie. He is also remembered for touring in a trio with Ray Brown on bass and Herb Ellis on guitar in the 1950s.

Peterson's impressive collection of awards include all of Canada's highest honors, such as the Order of Canada, as well as a Lifetime Grammy (1997) and a spot in the International Jazz Hall of Fame.

His growing stature was reflected in the admiration of his peers. Duke Ellington referred to him as "Maharajah of the keyboard," while Count Basie once said "Oscar Peterson plays the best ivory box I've ever heard."

In a statement, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said "one of the bright lights of jazz has gone out."

"He was a regular on the French stage, where the public adored his luminous style," Sarkozy said. "It is a great loss for us."

Jazz pianist Marian McPartland called Peterson "the finest technician that I have seen."

McPartland said she first met Peterson when she and her husband, jazz cornetist Jimmy McPartland, opened for him at the Colonial Tavern in Toronto in the 1940s.

"From that point on we became such goods friends, and he was always wonderful to me and I have always felt very close to him," she said. "I played at his tribute concert at Carnegie Hall earlier this year and performed `Tenderly,' which was always my favorite piece of his."

The American jazz pianist Billy Taylor called Peterson one of the finest jazz pianists of his time.

"He set the pace for just about everybody that followed him. He really was just a special player," Taylor said.

Jones called Peterson his idol and mentor.

"I've always thought of him as Canada's national treasure. All of Canada mourns for him and his family," Jones said. "He had 60 full years of being considered the top jazz pianist in the world."

Grammy-nominated jazz pianist Eldar Djangirov said he wouldn't have been a musician if he hadn't heard Peterson play.

"He influenced every piano player. He was the first I ever heard and my main artistic influence," Djangirov said. "He was on top for as long as he played. He would play things with one hand that most piano players couldn't do with both of their hands."

Born on Aug. 15, 1925, in a poor neighborhood southwest of Montreal, Peterson obtained a passion for music from his father. Daniel Peterson, a railway porter and self-taught musician, bestowed his love of music to his five children, offering them a means to escape from poverty.

Oscar Peterson learned to play trumpet and piano at a young age, but after a bout with tuberculosis had to concentrate on the latter.

He became a teen sensation in his native Canada, playing in dance bands and recording in the late 1930s and early 1940s. But he got his real break as a surprise guest at Carnegie Hall in 1949, after which he began touring the United States and Europe.

He quickly made a name for himself as a jazz virtuoso, often compared to piano great Art Tatum, his childhood idol, for his speed and technical skill.

He was also influenced by Nat King Cole, whose Nat King Cole Trio album he considered "a complete musical thesaurus for any aspiring Jazz pianist."

Peterson never stopped calling Canada home despite his growing international reputation. But at times he felt slighted here, where he was occasionally mistaken for a football player, standing at 6 foot 3 and more than 250 pounds.

In 2005 he became the first living person other than a reigning monarch to obtain a commemorative stamp in Canada, where he is jazz royalty, with streets, squares, concert halls and schools named after him.

Peterson suffered a stroke in 1993 that weakened his left hand, but not his passion or drive for music. Within a year he was back on tour, recording "Side By Side" with Itzhak Perlman.

As he grew older, Peterson kept playing and touring, despite worsening arthritis and difficulties walking.

"A jazz player is an instant composer," Peterson once said in a CBC interview, while conceding jazz did not have the mass appeal of other musical genres. "You have to think about it, it's an intellectual form," he said.

Peterson leaves behind his wife, Kelly, and their daughter, Celine.

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