That said, the album is terrifically satisfying. Simon has found a surprisingly effective musical voice intermingling doo-wop, traditional Latin styles and art-song sophistication in which to tell the story of Salvador Agron, a Puerto Rican teenager who inflamed New York's ever-simmering ethnic tensions when he killed two young white boys in 1959. Agron, whose gang was called the Vampires, wore a black cape, and the city's tabloids dubbed him the Capeman.
The sociopolitical aspects of the case occasionally lead Simon and Walcott to overreach in their lyrics, especially given the musical setting "The politics of prison are a mirror of the street/The poor endure oppression, the police control the State" is a far cry from "I just met a girl named Maria." But for the most part, the two men explore the tragedy of young lives swept up in circumstances far beyond their control with eloquence and a bracing lack of sentimentality. This work's ultimate question is, what are the possibilities of redemption? Can even the Capeman find his way to Graceland?
(Posted: Nov 14, 1997)
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- Adios Hermanos
- Born In Puerto Rico
- Satin Summer Nights
- Bernadette
- The Vampires
- Quality
- Can I Forgive Him
- Sunday Afternoon
- Killer Wants To Go To College
- Time Is An Ocean
- Virgil
- Killer Wants To Go To College II
- Trailways Bus
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.