Over five releases, the raga-intoning, Hindu-mystic enthusiasts Prince Rama have honed a droning, modal sort of shambolic rock that hews toward the celebratory, incantory, shamanistic, etc. On their next album, the Brooklyn-based group promise an expanded palette of genre tags — “cosmic disco, motorcycle rock, new-wave grunge, tribal goth, Arabic pop, and ghost-modern glam” amongst them — as they channel the ghosts of ten different pop bands that died during the apocalypse. (By the way, recently we suffered the apocalypse.) The concept allows the band to sun-salutation their way out of the corner they’d backed into, but despite the breadth of style signifiers, they’re keeping the co-signs and production personnel highly Paw Tracks-fam: recording with Tim Koh in Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti’s studio, mixed by Scott Colburn (Animal Collective, Sun City Girls, Arcade Fire), etc.