It hasn't all been bad - far from it - but you do get a bit jaundiced at times. You get to the point where you need a break from Vox amps, de-tuned Rickenbackers and album covers showing pudgy middle-aged men with pudding bowl haircuts. I can honestly say two things: This is the first Puerto Rican garage band album I've listened to end-to-end. And it's very good - to the point of being addictive.

Fourteen tracks of scrappy but charming rock and roll adorn "Los Vigilantes" and each has an original idea or three. Elements at play include call-and-response singalongs, cheesy organ and dry guitars. Male and female vocals mix it with catchy melodies, whistling and throbbing bass and drums.

There are knee jerking barn-burners and doo-wop. There's even a cocktail-shaker acid psych song ("Eres Tu") that would stand up against any "Nuggets" classic and a vocal ("Nunca Sabras") that's so dumb sounding it could have been put to tape by Dee Dee Ramone.

Los Vigilantes aren't unknowns, relatively speaking. They've had a cut on a Norton seven-inch compilation called "Their Hispanic Majesties Request" and a previous single on Slovenly. They don't sound remotely polished. Nor should it be. There's apparently a thriving garage and punk scene in Puerto Rico but I can't imagine that means recording budgets are big.

Every song is in Espanol so I don't have the faintest idea what they're singing about but rock and roll being a universal language this is no barrier to loving this record. At least the title of a song like "No" doesn't need explanation to a monolingual dummy like me - and it rocks, too. As a rubber-lipped man once said: "Es sólo rock and roll, pero me gusta."

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Slovenly Recordings on Bandcamp