Edmonton jazz musician Bobby Cairns dies from COVID-19 - Action News
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Edmonton jazz musician Bobby Cairns dies from COVID-19

Edmonton jazz musician Bobby Cairns died at the age of 78 on Saturday from COVID-19, his family confirmed.

'My dad just lived and breathed [music] and he walked around with his guitar all the time'

Edmonton jazz musician Bobby Cairns died Saturday. He was 78. (Submitted by Jay Cairns)

Edmonton jazz musician Bobby Cairns died at the age of 78on Saturday from COVID-19, his family confirmed.

Cairns began his careerat the age of 15 as a professional guitarist for renowned Edmonton jazz pianist and former senatorTommy Banks.

Herepresented Canada at jazz festivals around the world and was chair of the guitar program at Grant MacEwan College for 38 years, retiringin 2008.

Cairns' eldest son Jay Cairnssays both his parents contracted COVID-19 on Nov. 9 and were taken to the hospital two days later.

Bobby Cairns was chair of the guitar program at Grant MacEwan College for 38 years. (Submitted by Jay Cairns)

"We just were absolutely astonished at how the disease grabbed them and it was just quicksand, the deterioration was very rapid, especially for my dad," Cairnssaid."It was shocking."

Cairns says the familydoesn't know where his parents contracted the virus. Ashis parents were immunocompromised,they were very careful, he said.

He described his father as a quiet, gentle and humble person. "He was just such a talented man and has such a love for the music and for guitar and just putting some words together," he said.

Bobby Cairns and Banks owned and operated a studio that produced a number of jingles that were popular in the 1970s. They did the music for the Tommy Banks Show. Cairns played on Banks' Juno-winningJazz Canada Montreux 1978 album.

Cairnsand his father also wrote a jingle for "Speaker Corner A-Channel" in the early 2000s, he said.

"They asked for something urban but Alberta. So he played one track with an electric guitar and another on banjo," he recalled. "He was something else."

His father loved music, he said.

"My dad just lived and breathed it and he walked around with his guitar all the time. He was always practising and honing his craft."

Charlie Austin, retired music professor at MacEwanUniversity, remembers Cairns for his dry wit.

"When he's making something obvious well to me for example he had a way of putting things, that made you laugh first of all because it's so clever, but also instructive," Austin said.

"He was truly a great guy in every respect. And he will be really missed."

Austin said as a teacher he gave students a sense of self esteem.

"He was very open to teaching people and believing in the kids, that sort of thing, so he is very popular as a teacher and as a guy," he said.

Another colleague, Raymond Baril, remembers Cairns as a pragmatist.

"The world of post-secondary education can quickly focus on educational theory, policy and philosophy," Baril said. "He didn't get caught up in ideology. Hefocused on practical solutions."

Baril says Cairns was always "nervous and apologetic" about his lack of formal post-secondary education, "yet he was the most knowledgeable and, in many ways, the most educationally sound," he said.

His sonechoed thesuggestion.

"There was never a question that he didn't know [the answer]immediately. There was never, 'I'll have to get back to you on that' or whatever," Cairnssaid. "His knowledge was just so extensive."

His father's death has been a blow to the family, while his mother continues to strugglein ICU.

"If we lose her in the next couple of days, that's going to be a real sad story, to be orphaned in two weeks," he said.

A small, private funeral washeld Monday.