Single Review of Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures: “White Spade Symphony”
“White Spade Symphony” from Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures is the best brand-new ’70s-style psychedelic classic rock song you’ll have heard in quite some time.
The song clocks in at under 4 minutes, but it feels longer, as would be expected from a true ’70s psychedelic rocker. There’s a long instrumental section in the middle of the song that showcases screaming classing rock axework, giving it the feeling of one of those 5-to-7 minute AOR opuses from the seventies. (Note the foreshadowing there, kids.) There are segments of the song that remind me of Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth (Stop, Hey What’s That Sound),” though the classic rock reference is meant more generally, based on the tone of the guitars and the thin, distant seventies rock sound of Derek’s vocals.
In any case, “White Spade Symphony” is memorable and so well-done that it will soon become a favorite if you’re a fan of guitar-based classic rock in general, not just the ’70s psychedelic subcategory.
More Recently
Since the release of “White Spade Symphony,” the band has released two more singles – “Tomorrow Morning” and “Songbird” – and a full-length album, Opus, which contains both of those two singles but not “White Spade Symphony.”

