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Pigna

by Yarni

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  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Includes unlimited streaming of Pigna via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ships out within 3 days
    Purchasable with gift card

      £15.99 GBP or more 

     

  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Includes unlimited streaming of Pigna via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ships out within 3 days
    Purchasable with gift card

      £15.19 GBP or more 

     

  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      £7.99 GBP  or more

     

1.
2.
Utopia 03:40
3.
Chic 04:00
4.
5.
Nova 05:40
6.
7.
Cherub 03:45
8.
9.
10.
Trinacria 03:53

about

Peer through the windows of the sun-dappled homes in Sicily and you will be faced with a small, strange ceramic object adorning each hallway. It is a glistening pine cone standing upright – a pigna – the longstanding symbol of Sicilian openness and welcome hospitality.

The pigna is a delightfully unusual and yet apt symbol for the title of the third record from Benjamin Harris, AKA Yarni. Ever since his debut LP release in 2017, Yarni has established a following committed to his musical openness, an intuitive curiosity that has spanned everything from house and techno to cinematic ambience and Japanese percussion, as well as jazz horns and afrobeat fanfares. For Yarni, anything goes and everyone is welcome.

Yarni describes his musical journey as that of an “outsider” – someone who has had to develop his own tastes and styles separate from the confines of the zeitgeist. It is a story familiar to many formative artists, since creativity flourishes when it is faced with freedom and craft must be given space to be explored in all its nuance.

This wandering, self-instigated artistry has since been expressed in 2017’s Entkommen, which was inspired by the juxtaposition of brutalist architecture with nature in Derbyshire and translated into a mix of electronics and acoustics, while 2021’s Boro was the product of a journey to Japan and an immersion in its uniquely historic musical space. Now, Pigna sees Yarni reach his fullest and most musically diverse expression, taking its name and ethos from Sicily, but finding a sonic home in the luscious orchestration of a new ensemble of musicians.

Here, at the helm of a nine-person ensemble, Yarni artfully pieces together live improvisations to create the warmth of a seasoned group performing deep within the groove. Opener “Midnight Getaway” places the listener squarely within the disco-funk of Daft Punk as Yarni’s top-line synth intersects with a rolling bassline and a lyrical flute solo from Rachel Shirley. This optimistic tone of sunlit spaciousness is then heightened on “Utopia”, as Yarni’s horn section comes to the fore to pay homage to the ineffable syncopations of Fela Kuti’s pioneering afrobeat.

Rather than scratch at the surface of these musical genres, Yarni’s attuned ear embodies the emotive essence of his various sounds by paying intimate attention to their creation. There is the punch of that afrobeat sax on “Utopia”; the rhythmic skitter of breakbeats on “The Astral”; the sludging thump of funk in the bassline on “Nova”. Collaborators are given free reign, too, to incorporate their own unique stylings into this remarkable whole, from vocalist Emily Marks’ languid tone on “In A Dream”, to saxophonist Jonoa’s innate swing on “Cherub”, and the metronomic movement of bassist Ally McMahon’s playing throughout.

Listening to Pigna is ultimately to find yourself squarely within the comforting embrace of Yarni’s musical mind. It is a truly LP experience – a record to be placed on the turntable’s platter and then left to play, allowing yourself an immersion in these journeying soundscapes. It is no wonder fellow sonic travellers such as the late Andrew Weatherall and DJ Harvey have been supporters of Yarni’s work, since here is a kindred spirit – an artist shaped in the form of radical openness, speaking the hospitable, universal language of beautiful music.

credits

released June 10, 2022

Yarni: Drums, percussion, synth, guitars, engineering, production
Rachel Shirley: Flute
Sheila Herzog: Vocals
Emily Marks: Cello, vocals
Jeff Darko: Vocals
Ally McMahon: Electric bass
Ben Marks: Euphonium, trombone
James Atasharoo: Trumpet
Jonoa: Saxophone, songwriting

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about

Yarni Sheffield, UK

Sonic traveller, multi-instrumentalist, DJ & live performer. Sheffield United fan.

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