Music

21. 02. 2015

YANN TIERSEN + Tiny Feet

Having proven his extensive music gift passionately and committedly four years ago at his first and completely sold-out gig in Šiška, the charming French multi-instrumentalist Yann Tiersen returns to the scene of the crime presenting his latest, eighth studio album ‘∞ (Infinity)’, which was released on Mute. Not considering himself a film composer despite being

Having proven his extensive music gift passionately and committedly four years ago at his first and completely sold-out gig in Šiška, the charming French multi-instrumentalist Yann Tiersen returns to the scene of the crime presenting his latest, eighth studio album ‘∞ (Infinity)’, which was released on Mute. Not considering himself a film composer despite being known best for his “Amélie” score, Tiersen is playing Kino Šiška with his band on Saturday 21 February 2015 as part of his upcoming tour.

You don’t need to be a numerologist to know about the age old mystical associations the figure ‘8’ holds. A symmetrical shape that crosses over itself and forks out into an eternal geometric continuum, it is believed by some to be the number that balances the material and the immaterial worlds. It is this perpetuity that interests celebrated Breton musician Yann Tiersen.

“‘∞ (Infinity)‘ is my eighth studio album,” says Yann from his Ushant Island home situated thirty kilometres off the west coast of Brittany, “and an ‘8’ is also the sign of infinity. I didn’t choose the title, the title chose itself.”

Chez Yann, situated on a weather-beaten island in the Celtic Sea which is rich in stone and mineral and barren of tree and vegetation, played a major part in the process of creating ‘∞ (Infinity)‘, as did the arcadian wilds of the Faroe Islands and Iceland (where the humble beginnings of this collection of new musical works was first conceived). With the initial recordings taking place in Reykjavik, Tiersen then took this work back to Ushant to finish it off, but not before visiting the bucolic, windy lanes of Devon and Cornwall in a campervan, armed with a laptop for work and a bicycle for pleasure (cycling is an inveterate passion of Yann’s, and some of his road trips are astonishing in their scope and ambition.)

His full immersion into the rustic way of life and his admiration for desolate, sparsely-inhabited landscapes all seem a far cry from the cutesy postcard image of Montmartre and the soundtrack of Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s 2001 movie Amélie that some might best recognise Tiersen from. Indeed, ‘∞ (Infinity)’ as with all of Tiersen’s albums, including the Amélie soundtrack, is the very antithesis of the metropolis. If 2.2 million people inhabit Paris, then back on Ushant it’s a somewhat surprising 888 residents [“not a joke: 2012 numbers!” says Yann], although that figure doesn’t include sheep. “I have four sheep myself who live right outside the house,” he says.

Songs like the extravagant ‘Midsummer Evening’ are dense with manipulated textures, strings and choral chanting, an astounding layer cake of sumptuousness harvested from rugged, remote locations, though Yann explains that when these soundscapes began, they were little more than noise made from toys: “The idea was to start with toy instruments as a reference to my early works, then manipulate the sounds electronically. Then I added a new layer of acoustic instrumentation, and repeated the same process. Finally I repeated the process once more with strings, so the whole album was a constant back and forth from acoustic to electronic to digital, and then back to analogue.”

The exposed granite landscapes of the moors which Yann has made his home connect the Celtic island with the Nordic island country and its neighbouring southern archipelago, the Faroes. Whatsmore, the overarching thematic threads that bind ‘∞ (Infinity)’ together are the stones, the minerals, their infinite nature, and the islands already mentioned, plus the more nebulous yet defining concepts of ‘love and death’, according to Yann. Language too is integral to this album, with Faroese, Icelandic and English deployed, and significantly Breton too.

“As you may know, France tried hard to destroy the language. In Brittany in the 1960s it was forbidden ‘to spit and to speak Breton’ at school. So we are relearning our language as the Faroese people have successfully done.”

‘Ar Maen Bihan’, a story written by his partner in the Breton language, became the song of the same name on ‘∞ (Infinity)’. The words were then translated into English, and with help from amiina they became ‘Steinn’, in Icelandic. And then finally with Ólavur Jákupsson – a member of Tiersen’s live band – he wrote ‘Grønjørð’, in Faroese: a song about stones.

For the final song of ‘∞ (Infinity)’ Aidan Moffat (Arab Strap) came on board and provided a rousing Celtic finale with ‘Meteorite’ – his interpretation of Yann’s nonspecific instruction to write about stone. Tiersen says he’s always admired the ex-Arab Strap singer-songwriter and while a couple of attempted collaborations between the pair didn’t exactly spark into life, they hit a rich seam at the third time of asking.

Tiersen might be an internationally renowned French musician, but he says he dreams of an independent Brittany as part of a federal Europe, decrying the central government’s “bad agricultural policy, which causes pollution and serves only France’s interests… we have the same population as Wales here but far less money from Europe because of France’s redistribution.”

Live, Yann Tiersen is unmissable. A show at London’s ICA sold out immediately and will be the first opportunity to see Tiersen in London since the sold out Roundhouse show in 2011. Following a much-lauded live event last Halloween based on the legendary early 20th century cinematic crimefighter Fantômas, Yann will be back in Paris to play l’Olympia this October, with shows also scheduled for London’s Royal Festival Hall in September and New York’s The Highline in May.

Yann Tiersen was born in Brest in 1970 and began playing the piano and violin when just getting into short trousers at an early age. A teenage Yann smashed up his own violin eschewing the classical for punk rock and the sound of the guitar, though it was an epiphany in 1993 that made him realise he could combine the two, and the musician has been ploughing his own furrow ever since. “I’ve never been a virtuoso and there is something with virtuosity that I deeply hate,” he says. “I like simplicity and having fun with music, turnings knobs, banging strings, making amps scream, carressing keys, making noise.”

Yann has gone back to basics on ‘∞ (Infinity)’, making noise with toy instruments just like he did on his early works. “The idea was to start with toy instruments as a reference to my early works, then manipulate the sounds electronically as far as possible to end up with a new base. I took that base and added a new layer of acoustic instruments, and repeated the same process. Finally I repeated the process with strings, so the all album was a constant back and forth from acoustic to electronic to electric to digital, back to analogue. Then all back the other way.” And so, just like the ouroboros, the infinity cycle begins all over again.

www.yanntiersen.com

www.facebook.com/yanntiersen.official

www.youtube.com/user/YannTiersenOfficial

www.mute.com

www.facebook.com/muterecords

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJifgV5bjZA

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