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	<title>10 Listens &#187; Barn Nova</title>
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		<title>Short Cuts: MV &amp; EE&#8217;s Barn Nova</title>
		<link>http://10listens.com/2009/11/16/short-cuts-mv-ees-barn-nova/</link>
		<comments>http://10listens.com/2009/11/16/short-cuts-mv-ees-barn-nova/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Nov 2009 15:52:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joe O&#39;Brien</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Music Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barn Nova]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MV & EE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short cuts]]></category>

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Barn Nova, the latest record by the hyper-prolific musical collective known as MV &#38; EE, resembles a majestic, gigantic, moderately psychedelic Appalachian tree.  It’s rooted deep in the soil and its branches reach high enough to sway in the stratosphere.  It’s a perfect place to spend an afternoon daydreaming in the shade, or [...]]]></description>
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<p><em>Barn Nova</em>, the latest record by the hyper-prolific musical collective known as MV &amp; EE, resembles a majestic, gigantic, moderately psychedelic Appalachian tree.  It’s rooted deep in the soil and its branches reach high enough to sway in the stratosphere.  It’s a perfect place to spend an afternoon daydreaming in the shade, or an evening of stoned stargazing.  Unfortunately, its biggest limitation is that it never really goes anywhere.</p>
<p>The album begins pleasantly and promisingly with a little sunny-morning ditty called “Feelin’ Fine.”  Like all the songs here, it’s less of a composition than a sparse framework for various acoustic, electric and steel gee-tar licks to ramble, mingle and evaporate like wisps of incense smoke.  The drums are pretty much there just to keep time and provide a minimal pulse, and Matt Valentine&#8217;s phantasmal, reverb-saturated vocals simply fill in the spaces where vocals are supposed to go.  The second track, &#8220;Get Right Church,&#8221; picks up a funkier, trippier vibe while Erika Elder takes the mic and half-whispers a simple blues melody in her aloof sweetheart voice.</p>
<p>After listening to these tracks for the first time, I got my hopes up that Barn Nova would prove to be a special record, a beautiful marriage between the jaunty, half-cracked noodling of Wilco&#8217;s <em>A Ghost Is Born</em> and the sensual, shimmering haze of Mazzy Star&#8217;s <em>So Tonight That I Might See</em>.  But then the album seems to lie down in the grass for a short weed nap, and it doesn&#8217;t quite recover.  The wistful, ethereal &#8220;Snapperhead&#8221; evokes little more than a scrapped outtake from The Flaming Lips&#8217; sessions for<em> The Soft Bulletin</em>.  &#8220;Summer Magic&#8221; features flashes of inspired guitar heroics, including some by special guest star J Mascis, but those moments occur far between wide stretches of oppressively melancholy atmosphere.  Around the 10-and-a-half minute mark of another fitfully engaging dirge called &#8220;Bedroom Eyes,&#8221; the drums start to rev up, as if the band&#8217;s finally ready to set the controls for the heart of the sun and blast off.  To my dismay, those triple-time drum fills amount to nothing more than a tease, and the song fizzles to a close less than thirty seconds later.</p>
<p>In a folky Neil Young-like ballad called &#8220;Fully Tanked,&#8221; Valentine asks, &#8220;How can I miss you if you never leave?&#8221; and whenever I hear it, I can&#8217;t help but be reminded of how I feel about Barn Nova; though I have a soft spot for MV &amp; EE&#8217;s laid-back intoxication, I tend to easily lose patience when they drift through the valleys because they so rarely explore the peaks.</p>
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