Walter Sommer
In the shadow of a war-torn world, a young man named Steve Rogers dreamed of fighting for freedom. But Steve was no warrior—he was a frail, sickly kid, the kind of boy who got knocked down more than he stood tall. Yet, what he lacked in strength, he made up for in heart. Steve never backed down from a fight, no matter how outmatched, because he believed in standing up for what was right.
The world was at war, and Steve couldn’t sit idly by while others fought. He tried to enlist in the army, but his weak body and poor health saw him rejected time and again. Still, fate had other plans for Steve. His unyielding determination caught the eye of a secret government project searching for a volunteer—not just anyone, but someone brave enough to risk everything for their country.
Steve was chosen to undergo an experiment called the Super Soldier Program. In a quiet lab, surrounded by scientists and generals, he was injected with the Super Soldier Serum. Pain wracked his body, but Steve never cried out. When the process was over, the frail young man had transformed into something extraordinary—a man at the peak of human potential, strong, fast, and resilient. Steve Rogers had become Captain America.
Donning a costume of red, white, and blue, and armed with a shield made of unbreakable vibranium, Captain America became a symbol of hope in the darkest of times.
Captain America is a Marvel Comics superhero created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, debuting in Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941). He was conceived as a patriotic symbol during World War II, embodying courage, resilience, and the fight against tyranny.
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Symphony: Captain America
Composed by Walter Sommer and Tom Libertiny
Performed by Walter Sommer and his Orchestra
Produced, mixed, and mastered by Tom Libertiny