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Chuck Negron, Three Dog Night

Chuck Negron founding member of the band Three Dog Night has died at age 83. I received this release from his publicist:

STUDIO CITY, Calif. (February 2, 2026) – Chuck Negron, acclaimed musician, notorious rock star, and founding member of Three Dog Night, died peacefully at the age of 83 at his home in Studio City, California on Monday, February 2 surrounded by his loving family. Through his six decades of success, and all the ups-and-downs, his large, unconventional family was most important to him. He is survived by his wife Ami Albea Negron, his children Shaunti Negron Levick, Berry Oakley, Charles Negron III, Charlotte Negron, and Annabelle Negron, his brother Rene (Jody) Negron, sister Denise (Janey) Negron, his 9 grandchildren, 5 nieces and 2 nephews, as well as his children’s mothers, Paula Servetti, Julia Negron, Robin Silna, and Kate Vernon. He was predeceased by his parents, Charles Negron and Elizabeth Rooke, and his twin sister Nancy Negron Dean. After decades of estrangement between him and fellow Three Dog Night founder, Danny Hutton, the two men met last year in a timely effort to exchange apologies and bury the hatchet.

Negron’s lead vocals appear on classics like “Joy To The World (Jeremiah Was A Bullfrog),” “One (Is The Loneliest Number),” “Easy To Be Hard,” “Old Fashioned Love Song,” “The Show Must Go On,” and more. With heavy drug use rampant during their quick ascension to the top, Negron developed an addiction that took it a step too far. The band’s success was stymied by fractions internally, and fell apart at their peak. Negron’s addiction overtook him, he spent his fortune on drugs and even ended up on Los Angeles’ notorious Skid Row for a time. After many rehabilitation attempts, he finally got clean in 1991 and went on to have a successful solo career, releasing seven albums between ‘95 and 2017. He released a highly-acclaimed book, Three Dog Nightmare in 1999, which was an honest recount of the ups and downs of his life, truthfully claiming responsibility for his downfalls and strengthening his path of rehabilitation.

In his later years, Negron continued to tour heavily, even through chronic COPD for three decades. He developed cutting-edge strategies to continue to perform at a high-level despite setbacks, and was proud of his vocal abilities until his last shows. The COVID-19 pandemic sidelined him permanently, as touring became impossibly unsafe with his condition. In his final months, he battled heart failure in addition to the COPD. Chuck Negron was a testament to never giving up – persevering through everything life throws at you, everything you may throw at yourself, and striving on.
 
Death comes in threes. Catherine O'Hara, Demond Wilson, and now Chuck Negron, one of the reasons why '70s music is still awesome to this day. RIP Chuck and condolences to Danny Hutton, and Chuck's family/friends.
 
BTW, I noticed the name "Berry Oakley" among Negron's survivors. We all know that Berry Oakley was the original bassist for the Allman Brothers. Berry had a son, Berry Duane Oakley, born on March 30, 1973. His father died in a road accident before he was born. After that, young Berry's mother Julia married Chuck Negron in 1976. She was also previously married to Doors drummer John Densmore. Berry's godfather is Door's guitarist Robbie Krieger. Interesting side-story to Chuck Negron.
 
Many people who don't write for a living make the same mistakes, but a paid publicist shouldn't.

The publicist works for the artist and takes direction from the artist, who gets approval over everything the publicist writes. My take is this is the image the artist wanted portrayed. He spent years as a heroin addict and has four ex-wives. That's the life of a "notorious rock star." I once had a conversation with a publicist, expressing my surprise over what the artist was doing, and she told me, "At the end of the day, it's his career, not mine. I just provide support service for him. He makes all the decisions." It can be a strange relationship.
 
For example: Jeffrey Ross is notorious for doing comedy roasts, Taylor Swift is notorious for her record-breaking Eras tour, Jackson Pollock was notorious for his painting style, etc.
 
Interestingly, Merriam-Webster sees it both ways:

But in the example given for the "positive" connotation of "notorious," no one would use that adjective to praise iron. That sentence would be used by someone warning against some use of iron in a setting where its heat conductivity would be undesired or even dangerous. It's a stretch, linguistically, even to consider "notorious" neutral in that sentence. Positive? No way.
 
But in the example given for the "positive" connotation of "notorious," no one would use that adjective to praise iron. That sentence would be used by someone warning against some use of iron in a setting where its heat conductivity would be undesired or even dangerous. It's a stretch, linguistically, even to consider "notorious" neutral in that sentence. Positive? No way.

I mean, you're right----but Merriam-Webster leaves a little linguistic wiggle room. I've never used it in a positive sense, but...
 


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