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Chuck NegronThree Dog Night reached the top of the charts again a year later with Randy Newman's "Mama Told Me (Not to Come)". In 1971, their recording of Hoyt Axton's "Joy to the World" became the group's biggest hit - spending six weeks on top of the Billboard charts. Like many other successful rock and roll artists, Negron developed a drug habit. When Three Dog Night dissolved in 1977, he had a $2,000-a-day habit. In the early 1990s, after suffering from drug addiction for almost twenty years, Negron went into a recovery house called Cri-Help, and stayed for almost a year. Rehabilitated, Negron restarted his musical career in 1994 by opening Howie Mandel's Atlantic City show. His debut solo album, Am I Still in Your Heart, was released in 1995. Today, Negron tours, playing more than 70 dates a year, and works with anti-drug organizations like Musicians Assistance Program (MAP), MusiCares, and Cri-Help.
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