| |
The free-jazz trio, Scola Tristano, includes a Franciscan priest.
|
| FATHER FORTUNA |
| The rappin’ jazz priest of Scola Tristano |
By Jonathan Funke
“BLESS ME FATHER, for I have riffed. Like, a lot, man.”
It’s how I imagine Father Stan Fortuna at
confession after a fire-breathing gig at Birdland with his free-improv
band Scola Tristano. How else to pardon an ascetic Roman Catholic
priest who sleeps on a bare floor, ministers daily to the poorest kids
in the South Bronx, then packs up his borrowed bass fiddle to play a
notoriously indulgent form of music in one of the toniest venues in
Christendom?
The short answer is that there needn’t be any
conflict. The Lord’s calling proved undeniable; music simply shouted
first. Father Stan doesn’t even try to blend his inspirations in the
manner of John Coltrane’s epochal hymn of faith and renewal, A Love
Supreme.
“It wasn’t like, ‘Wow, Coltrane did it—maybe I can
do it,’” says the Franciscan, who made a name for himself bumming
around New York clubs before entering St. Anselm’s College in his
mid-20s to answer a higher calling. “I came in thinking I was letting
it all go. But people started to say, ‘Wait, you’re that bassist from
New York.’ And after a lot of time, it started coming back.”
That’s not to say that music—even hip-hop
culture—doesn’t help the ministry. Our interview is briefly interrupted
by a young graffiti artist who, under the guiding hand of the Community
of Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, has redirected his energies from
defacing property to creating “Francesco Ghetto Design” T-shirts. Sales
of shirts, videos and music downloads (at www.francescoproductions.com)
support outreach efforts, which have grown since 1987 to include
missions from Honduras to the United Kingdom
Opinions differ on how much reverence to give to
Father Stan’s rap credentials, but that shouldn’t be at issue on Monday
for the man who got his start “trading fours with Slam Stewart” and
Woody Herman. “I’m not gonna be doing any hip-hop at Birdland, you know
what I’m saying?” he reassures in a rapid-fire version of his “hey,
man” lingua franca.
Though versed in the street currency of 50 Cent,
Fortuna and drummer Peter Scattaretico both drew personal inspiration
directly from mentor Lennie Tristano. The Scola Tristano trio, rounded
out by veteran guitarist Peter Prisco, is a breathing tribute to the
free-jazz pioneer once described as an “adamant iconoclast” at the
keyboard.
Pressed to show a connection between jazz and other
influences, Father Stan blows past “fusion” to the deeper musical
truths they share. “Lyrical improv is the best of Brazilian music. It’s
the best of what hip-hop is; hip-hop is heavily seasoned with jazz
melodies. Improv is a language. You develop some vocabulary, learn some
grammar … but whether it’s music or life, I want to be swinging.”
Amen to that.
Oct. 9. Birdland, 315 W. 44th St. (betw. 8th & 9th Aves.),
212-581-3080; 7, $25.
| Volume 19, Issue 40
©2006 All rights reserved.
No part of this website may be reproduced in any manner without written permission of the publisher. |
|
|