more from
Nothing Fancy
We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Disneyland In Dagenham

by Scott Lavene

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Pre-order of Disneyland In Dagenham. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
    Purchasable with gift card
    releases May 10, 2024

      £7 GBP  or more

     

  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Includes digital pre-order of Disneyland In Dagenham. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
    shipping out on or around May 10, 2024

      £20 GBP or more 

     

  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    Includes digital pre-order of Disneyland In Dagenham. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
    shipping out on or around May 10, 2024

      £10 GBP or more 

     

  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Includes digital pre-order of Disneyland In Dagenham. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
    shipping out on or around May 10, 2024

      £10 GBP or more 

     

  • CD + LTD edition signed & printed lyrics
    Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    Limited to 50

    There will be 5 copies of each track featuring the lyrics from that track, printed onto heavy weight paper, signed & numbered by Scott Lavene.

    Includes digital pre-order of Disneyland In Dagenham. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.

    Sold Out

  • Vinyl + LTD edition signed & printed lyrics
    Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Limited to 50

    There will be 5 copies of each track featuring the lyrics from that track, printed onto heavy weight paper, signed & numbered by Scott Lavene.

    Includes digital pre-order of Disneyland In Dagenham. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.

    Sold Out

1.
Paper Roses (featuring Craig Finn)
2.
Custard
3.
Debbie 05:02
All the fancy machines are on the floor in the lounge and they’re switched on, Humming. Bleep bleep. Bloop bloop. Debbie’s an inventor, she’s trying to build a rocket. “You’re in the way”, she says. “And get me another extension lead. Oh, and take the bread out of that, it’s not a toaster.” Take the bread out of that, it’s not a toaster. Outside, the moon is lavender blue, and curved liked a kitten. The light on the fish and chip shop is flicking on and off, and buzzing like a bag of wasps. Kids are throwing stones at a white circle drawn on a garage door, 10 points. clang, clang, clang clang, clang clang. It’s not a toaster. Take the bread out of that, it’s not a toaster. “It’s a nice evening,” I say. “Can’t we go out? You could save the inventing for winter.” “I need to be gone by October,” she says. “I have a mission from Zeus. I am a constructor of empires for future generations. I am the saviour of all our filthy souls. I am Debbie.” “Do you want some more juice Debbie?” I say. But she don’t reply. Take the bread out of that, it’s not a toaster. I’ve got an itch on my leg. I’m not going to itch it. I’m going to think about something to make it go away just like astronauts do. I think about how many loafs of bread it would take to build a staircase to the moon. I think about Debbie before she became an inventor. She worked in the make up department of Debenhams. She always smelt like a box of roses and her hair was slick like she’d got out of the bath even though she hadn’t. She looked like one of those women in the Robert Palmer video when they’re all pretending to play instruments while he sings about being addicted to love. I used to be addicted to love. I loved so much that I run out of underpants. I loved so much that I know how to escape from a block of flats without using any doors. Take the bread out of that, it’s not a toaster. That itch is still there. “Here Debbie, Can you invent me a pair of magic trousers?” “What do you want them to do?” “I want one pocket to stay full up with cash and one pocket to stay filled up with cold custard” Debbie drinks her glass down in one and hands me the empty vessel, covered in sooty fingerprints and a greasy mark from her lips. “We need more juice,” she says. “And I need fuses. Lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of fuses.” Take the bread out of that, it’s not a toaster
4.
Horse and I
5.
6.
7.
Julie Johnson
8.
Little Bird
9.
Rats
10.
Keeping It Local

about

“Tragi-comic Custard and Debbie and Lavene’s stock-in-trade, mixing Baxter-Dury like roughshod poetry with Robyn Hitchcock’s surrealist flair. Flute-looped Little Bird reveals a more delicate balladeer.” MOJO

In the 1980s the Walt Disney Company were considering building their first European theme park not on the outskirts of Paris, but in Dagenham, Essex. In his youth, Scott Lavene used to pick up drugs from a dodgy flat overlooking the proposed site. Disney and Dagenham were never a good fit, he thought, as he stood on the balcony one evening as the sun set, awaiting an overdue hash delivery. It never happened of course – perhaps the multinational corporation were put off by the sewage works and car factories that Mickey Mouse and Goofy would have counted as their neighbours.

So he recalls on the title track of his exceptional third album Disneyland In Dagenham, monologuing in warm deadpan over a wandering acoustic guitar. It encapsulates his conflicted feelings about the county he was raised. “A cowboy kind of place, a bit rough around the edges,” as he puts it. “A lot of funny stuff happened that you’d tell to normal people who’d be like, ‘What the fuck?!’” It’s changed a lot since then. Filming the video for the song, he and his sister took a drive around their old haunts along the A13. “The sewage works don’t smell anymore and they’re now calling Rainham ‘East London’, which is hilarious. It made me grateful for my past, for the shit we could get away with back then.”

A born storyteller, through his records and his writing ­– he sends out monthly short stories under the title ‘Bits & Bobs’ via his mailing list and is currently working on his first novel – Lavene has long been populating a hallucinogenic world of his own creation with ne’er do wells, ragamuffins and eccentrics. From a man draining the blood of property agents in the aid of local businesses (‘Keeping It Local’) to a talking horse who travels Europe selling hash, gambling and performing covers of Talking Heads, Disneyland In Dagenham is no exception. It’s a record that tumbles together the autobiographical and the imagined, the heart-breaking and the preposterous; the tale of that itinerant drug-dealing horse, for instance is also a genuinely touching allegory for the way friendships can slip through one’s fingers.

For all the surrealism, it also explores the magic of the banal. When he first started writing it, Lavene says, “I was a bit sick of writing stories about the past.” He’s led a more eventful life than most. Lavene’s 20s took him from sleeping in a tent as he roamed around France with his guitar to flirting with the music industry proper while living on a London houseboat, and then to a period of serious mental collapse that saw him withdraw completely from music for seven years, “but I’m not that man any more,” he says. “These days I’m a dad of three. So initially I just wanted to make an album about living in the suburbs and raising kids.” ‘Custard’ is a song about his drinking a pint of custard straight from the carton, and his five-year-old daughter nagging him to get a dog. ‘Rats’ concerns the rodents that were there to greet the Lavene family when they moved into a new house. When the past does rear its head, it’s often through a haze of melancholy. “I’m nostalgic by nature,” Lavene says. “I think I have a really good memory for emotion. I think it’s because I’m riddled with self-pity!”

Before long, of course, Lavene realised his storytelling couldn’t be contained by so simple a brief. ‘Debbie’, for example is a bizarre and semi-fictional song about fading love, based around a transfixingly woozy guitar line. “It’s a fucking weird song, but also my favourite thing I’ve ever done. So how could I not include it?” Lavene says. “The album is really about saying fuck the rules, write whatever you like.” Whether lyrically, or through music that leaps from spiky psychedelia to flute-driven crooning, driving wah-wah rock n roll to a sleazy Serge Gainsbourg-esque shuffle, Disneyland In Dagenham is therefore a record that’s frankly bonkers in its scope. For the first time he’s completely abandoned any pretence of coolness. “I was not afraid to include everything that I like, whether or not it’s really eccentric. I wasn’t afraid of just making the record that I wanted.”

He made it at swift pace Benjamin Woods of The Golden Dregs, after Lavene sold a guitar to pay for a week at Greenwich’s Vacant TV studios. It was a cold December and they were limited for both time and gear so they recorded quickly in hats and coats, Woods adding drums and occasional guitar and synth. It was fleshed out later with some further home recordings and friends’ contributions on saxophone, flutes and percussion. It's Lavene’s third since getting sober, and with each album he’s got closer to the point at which he now stands, a moment of total self-assurance. ‘Sadly I’m not Steve McQueen’ contrasts the dreary romance of his Essex upbringing with his dreams of international stardom – a Malibu mansion next door to Keith Moon’s and a bright red open-topped sports car, but today such validation no longer matters. “It would be nice to make £150,000 a year from tours and sell 20,000 records, don’t get me wrong, but I don’t really care about that any more. Lavene’s got something worth more than any of that – a fanbase for many of whom his music means absolutely everything.

“My music’s a bit marmitey,” he says, but for those who love it it’s a love that runs deep – a recent crowdfunding campaign for Lavene to set up his own home studio, for instance, rapidly outstripped its target, setting the stage for “the grotty Essex Neil Young album” he’s already got in the pipeline. “There aren’t any songs of mine that are specifically about mental problems, but the amount of people that have come up to me and said that my music has got them through a really tough time. One guy said that he had tried to kill himself the year before and found my music when he was in hospital. He was like, ‘You made me want to stay alive’. That is really, really special.” An audience that’s both smaller and more dedicated can mean a type of connection more worthwhile than any arena show, he says. “That guy’s come to three or four gigs since then, and to meet the guy is just so fucking beautiful. Music’s given me a lot over the years, and I find it bizarre and wonderful that mine can give that to people too.”

That’s not to say Lavene’s short of recent achievements. He was invited by The Hold Steady’s frontman Craig Finn to tour with him last year, which went down so well that they’ll hit the road together once more in February. After a triumphant set at End Of The Road Festival, he then capped 2023 opening for The Hold Steady proper at the band’s legendary annual New York residency. Finn is among the many converted to Lavene’s work, and he appears on Disneyland In Dagenham opener ‘Paper Roses’. Finn had Tweeted about his enjoyment of Lavene’s music while he was in the studio with Benjamin Woods. “I’m not very good at self-promotion but I was with someone who was. Benjamin was like, ‘Fucking tweet him back! Get him on the album! We went for a coffee and he asked me to go on tour with him, it’s a relationship of mutual admiration really. And what a bloody gift he’s given me – I’ve definitely stolen quite a lot of Hold Steady fans.”

It’s not hard to see why. Though in person he’s thoughtful and softly-spoken, onstage Lavene is a born entertainer; a comedian, raconteur and storyteller as much as a musician. “I’m like a Butlins Redcoat,” he jokes. It doesn’t matter if it’s 10 people or 1,000, I can entertain a crowd with a drum machine and a guitar. I like when people say that they can be laughing, then crying literally five seconds later within the same song.” It’s a safe bet, then, that in the wake of Disneyland In Dagenham there’ll be plenty more converts to follow. After all, Lavene jokes, “I’m like The Beatles, but a little bit Tom Waits, a little bit Whitesnake, a little bit Chas & Dave, and a little bit power ballads.” All worthy comparisons, but ultimately Scott Lavene is the kind of artist that can be compared only to himself.

credits

releases May 10, 2024

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

Scott Lavene England, UK

shows

contact / help

Contact Scott Lavene

Streaming and
Download help

Shipping and returns

Redeem code

Report this album or account

If you like Scott Lavene, you may also like: