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Three Dog Night’s Chuck Negron Checks Out at 83—You’ll Never Guess the Wild Stories He Leaves Behind

Added on February 3, 2026 inMusic News Cards

Ever catch yourself belting out “Joy to the World” at the top of your lungs and wondering if the planets just lined up to make Three Dog Night a household name? Well, as the sun drifts through the final, golden days of Gemini, it feels strangely fitting to say goodbye to Chuck Negron — a voice that shimmered like Mercury in retrograde (unpredictable, unforgettable, sometimes a little chaotic). Is it a cosmic coincidence that a star like Negron, who shaped the late ’60s and early ’70s soundtrack, would take his final bow when the universe seems full of musical nostalgia and stardust? Maybe the universe just needed another angelic baritone for its celestial chorus. As we remember Chuck — the man who gave us so many feel-good anthems, a story as wild and winding as a Mercury-in-Gemini transit — let’s raise a metaphorical glass (or, dare I say, a fifth of “wine”) to a legend whose songs made us laugh, cry, and dance around the living room like no one was watching. LEARN MORE

Chuck Negron, a founding member of Three Dog Night whose lead vocals powered a string of hits including “Joy to the World,” “One” and “An Old Fashioned Love Song” for one of the top rock acts of the late 1960s and early ’70s, died Monday. He was 83.

Negron died of complications from heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at his home in Studio City, according to publicist Zach Farnum.

Negron also sang lead on “Easy to Be Hard” and “The Show Must Go On.” The band’s other hits included “Black and White,” “Mama Told Me (Not to Come),” “Never Been to Spain” and “Shambala.”

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Three Dog Night made it to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Mama Told Me (Not to Come),” “Joy to the World” and “Black and White.”

In December 1972, the band hosted and performed on the inaugural edition of Dick Clark’s “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.”

By 1975, album sales had declined and the band had its last Billboard hit with “Til the World Ends.” Internal strife fractured the group, and it fell apart the next year. Three Dog Night reunited in 1981, but Negron was dismissed in late 1985 because of recurring drug issues.

He had joined Danny Hutton and Cory Wells in 1967 to form Three Dog Night, a vocal trio with roots in R&B, rock ’n’ roll and urban doo wop. They found success two years later with their first million-selling single, “One,” written by Harry Nilsson.

Negron engaged in heavy drug use during the band’s quick ascension to the top of the charts. He spent his fortune on drugs and ended up on Los Angeles’ Skid Row for a time.

Following numerous stints in rehab, he became sober in 1991 and went on to have a solo career, releasing seven albums between 1995 and 2017. His 1999 book, Three Dog Nightmare, detailed his ups and downs.

After decades of estrangement between him and Hutton, the two reconciled last year. Hutton and Michael Allsup are the lone surviving members.

Born Charles Negron II on June 8, 1942, he grew up in the Bronx singing in doo wop groups from an early age. His parents divorced when he was 2. He was recruited by UCLA to play basketball, which brought him to Los Angeles, where he began working in the music industry.

In his later years, Negron toured through chronic COPD for three decades. The COVID-19 pandemic sidelined him permanently.

Negron is survived by wife Ami Albea Negron and his five children, including Berry Oakley Jr., the son of Allman Brothers Band bassist Berry Oakley, who was killed in a 1972 motorcycle accident. Negron was for a time married to Julia Negron, the younger Oakley’s mother, and helped raise infant Berry Jr.

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