Zweites Solowerk des brasilianischen Musikers Rodrigo Amarante, bekannt für den Titelsong Tuyo der Netflix-Serie Narcos, als Mitglied von Orquestra Imperial, Los Hermanos, der Rough Trade-Band Little Joy (mit Fab Moretti von The Strokes & Bikini Shapiro), sowie als Komponist für Gal Costa, Norah Jones und Gilberto Gil.
Im Gegensatz zu seinem Solodebüt Cavalo (2014) ist Drama karikaturistisch, filmisch, parteiisch wie die Erinnerung. Die Songs fliessen im Bogen, spielerisch täuschend, wie ein Märchen. Der ominöse Opener/Titelsong lässt erahnen, dass die Dinge vielleicht nicht so sind, was sie zu sein scheinen, und dass sich Hinweise im Verborgenen verstecken.
Since releasing the sublime Cavalo in 2014, Brazilian singer/songwriter Rodrigo Amarante has earned some well-deserved North American hype thanks to the evocative "Tuyo," which he wrote as the theme song for Netflix's drug cartel drama Narcos. A creaky, string-decorated bolero sung in Spanish, it's a typically eclectic offering from an artist who is hard to pin down. Weaving and winding through an array of beguiling rhythms, languages, and tones, Amarante's second album, Drama, moves between flair and subtlety with a casual grace that feels timeless. From the melodramatic strings-meet-laugh track dichotomy of the opening instrumental to its deceptively breezy art-pop counterpart "Maré," Amarante casts a spell that remains unbroken for the album's duration. The swooning bossa nova of "Tara" gives way to the haunting clamor of "I Can't Wait," one of several English language cuts from the now Los Angeles-based singer. With its growling horn stacks, "Tao" lays down an inescapable groove and represents Drama at its most muscular. More than anything, Amarante feels like a Tropicália artist for the 21st century, artfully fusing Brazilian and Latin American traditions to progressive songwriting and arrangements that touch on pop, psychedelia, folk, and rock. Like a consummate craftsman he folds unexpected details into the whole without a lot of fanfare, which lends the album an undercurrent of excitement and even tension. Leaving the listener with a sense of sweet melancholia, Amarante wraps up with "The End," a dusty-voiced piano ballad that serves as the closing credits to Drama's captivating journey.
(by Timothy Monger, All Music Guide)