We present a detailed characterisation and theoretical interpretation of
the broadband emission of the paradigmatic TeV blazar Mrk 421, with
special focus on the multi-band flux correlations. The dataset has been
collected through an extensive multiwavelength campaign organised
between 2016 December and 2017 June. The instruments involved are MAGIC,
FACT, Fermi-LAT, Swift, GASP-WEBT, OVRO, Medicina and Metsähovi.
Additionally, four deep exposures (several hours long) with simultaneous
MAGIC and NuSTAR observations allowed a precise measurement of the
falling segments of the two spectral components. The very-high-energy
(VHE; E > 100 GeV) gamma rays and X-rays are positively correlated at
zero time lag, but the strength and characteristics of the correlation
change substantially across the various energy bands probed. The VHE
versus X-ray fluxes follow different patterns, partly due to substantial
changes in the Compton dominance during a few days without a
simultaneous increase in the X-ray flux (i.e. orphan gamma-ray
activity). Studying the broadband spectral energy distribution (SED)
during the days including NuSTAR observations, we show that these
changes can be explained within a one-zone leptonic model with a blob
that increases its size over time. Our multi-band correlation study also
hints at an anti-correlation between UV/optical and X-ray at a
significance higher than 3 sigmas. A VHE flare observed on 2017 February
4 shows gamma-ray variability on multi-hour timescales, with a factor 10
increase in the TeV flux but only a moderate increase in the keV flux.
The related broadband SED is better described by a two-zone leptonic
scenario rather than by a one-zone scenario. We find that the flare can
be produced by the appearance of a compact second blob populated by high
energetic electrons spanning a narrow range of Lorentz factors.