Dexter and the Derbies photo Limestone Democrat, January 23, 1968

Dexter and the Derbies

Dexter and the Derbies photo Limestone Democrat, January 23, 1968
Dexter and the Derbies, January 1968, from left: Dexter Greenhaw, Dennis Brooks, Danny Ausley and Mark Gamble

Dexter and the Derbies Derby 45 Time

Dexter and the Derbies came from Athens, Alabama, a small city about 95 miles north of Birmingham, and 99 miles south of Nashville, TN.

The Limestone Democrat newspaper featured this photo of Dexter and the Derbies on the front page of the January 23, 1968 issue. The band was part of the International Rodeo Association convention in Nashville. The members were:

Dexter Greenhaw – lead guitar
Dennis Brooks – drums
David (Danny) Ausley – rhythm guitar
Mark Gamble – bass guitar

Dexter and the Derbies cut only one single, released in August 1967 according to Teen Beat Mayhem. The band members would have been about 12 years old when recording the songs.

The top side is the intense “Time”, written by J. Greenhaw who seems to be Dexter’s brother Johnny Greenhaw. I can’t make out all the lyrics but one verse goes “Everybody wants to be loved and romanced, but nobody, I mean nobody will give a second chance”.

Rochelle Frazier and Buck Peddy wrote “They Wouldn’t Dare”, registering the song on December 9, 1965, almost two years before Dexter & the Derbies recorded it. The lyrics tred similar ground to the Barbarians’ “Are You a Boy or Are You a Girl” from earlier that year.
Dexter and the Derbies Derby 45 They Wouldn't Dare

The girls wear pants now and also shirts,
Pretty soon the boys will be wearing skirts.
Now don’t tell me that they wouldn’t dare,
If you don’t think they would take a look at their hair.

Now you don’t touch when you dance these days,
In fact your partner moves far away.
How can you hold anybody tight,
When they twist and turn right out of your sight.

You ask your neighbor if that’s his girl,
She looks so pretty with her long blonde curls.
That’s when you feel when like you ought to run,
When he says “that’s not my daughter, it’s my teenage son!”

Now don’t tell me that they wouldn’t dare,
If you don’t think they would take a look at their hair.

Buck Peddy wrote songs with Mel Tillis among others. He seems to have produced this single, and his Peddy Music published both songs. Released on Derby Records 1313 out of Nashville, Tennessee, the labels show Sound of Nashville master numbers SoN 48941/2.

Dexter Greenhaw graduated high school in 1973, then studied music at the University of North Alabama. He directed the band at Clements High School, and also had a band called Denim. Dexter passed away in March, 2007 of ALS at the young age of 52.

Source: info on Dexter Greenhaw from a News Courier article in March, 2007.

4 thoughts on “Dexter and the Derbies”

  1. Rhythm guitar was David (Danny) Ausley – not “Denny” as shown.
    Mark Gamble, Dennis Brooks, and David Ausley are still friends and live in, or near the Athens, AL area

  2. This is very nice I’m Dennis Brooks the Drummer. good time for all music 1967 lots of bands back then. Bands like the neutrons the Harvey’s Solid Goal Band. Best band I ever heard back then rite Buchanon, solid goal band singer

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