Derek De Vriendt

Derek Alan de Vriendt (born March 15, 1979) is an American singer-songwriter who is best known as the lead guitarist and vocalist of -based pop punk band Screaming Yellow Players. Since September 2019, he has also been the lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist of The Cars.

Biography
Derek was born at in, and grew up on various U.S. military bases, mainly in  and. His father, Corbin De Vriendt, was a U.S. Air Force Captain and inventor who had been engaged in the use of live satellite feeds to Europe and Asia of events specifically targeted to U.S. military personnel stationed overseas, and holds a patent for a "far-reaching" directional digital television transmission system (notably adopted by WMTW during the digital transition to allow transmissions from to still provide an acceptable signal to southern Maine). His mother, Gillian De Vriendt, was a newsreader for.

The Cars
In February-March 2019, Derek filled in for Ric Ocasek during a series of The Cars shows in El Kadsre and Mahri while Ocasek was in the midst of surgery. El Kadsreian media acclaimed Derek's performance, with The El Kadsreian Chronicle saying "the longtime Screaming Yellow Players vocalist fits very well with the Cars' signature sound." Drummer Roger Davis described Derek's performance for El TV Kadsre 24: "We all wanted Derek to be the fill-in, and this is a country that's mostly used to seeing Ric singing with the band. At Derek's first show, the audience went nuts during "Shake It Up" - we were stressed out at first since this was a sold-out concert in a major venue. Derek's a total winner." On September 15, 2019, Ocasek died from natural causes. On September 22, keyboardist confirmed in an interview for El Kadsre's Radio 22 that Derek would be the new lead singer and rhythm guitarist of The Cars. In 2021, the band released their first album with Derek as lead singer/rhythm guitarist, Brand New (consisting of material written by Ocasek prior to his death, along with new songs written by the other band members and some covers), much of the album was recorded at the band members' homes due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The album was near-universally acclaimed and reached #5 on the Billboard 200 in the United States.

Guitars

 * 1982 G&L SC-2 (Fiesta Red)
 * 1984 G&L Skyhawk (Black)
 * 1984 G&L Rampage (Pink)
 * 1986 G&L Broadcaster (Black)
 * 1984 G&L Interceptor (Red)
 * G&L ASAT Special (Fullerton Red)

Amplifiers/Microphones
Derek uses Hughes & Kettner amplifiers, Nady wireless guitar equipment, and a Sony ECM-51 "game show" microphone.