Three Dog Night
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Three Dog Night was an American rock and roll band active from 1968 to 1975.
The band started with three lead vocalists — Danny Hutton, Chuck Negron, and Cory Wells — who landed a recording contract with Dunhill Records in Los Angeles. They made some early recordings with Beach Boys producer, composer, vocalist, and instrumentalist Brian Wilson, and initially went by the name Redwood. The band changed their name based on an article describing how Australian Aborigines slept with their dogs for warmth on cold nights, the coldest being a "three-dog night." The vocalists soon hired a group of backing musicians — Michael Allsup on guitar, Floyd Sneed on drums, Joe Schermie (from the Cory Wells Blues Band) on bass, and Jimmy Greenspoon on keyboards — and soon became one of the most successful bands of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Three Dog Night collected fourteen gold albums and recorded twenty-one Billboard Top 40 hits, nine of which went gold. Their first gold record was "One" in 1969, followed by "Easy To Be Hard," from the musical Hair. They had three U.S. number one songs: "Mama Told Me Not to Come" (which was also their only Top 10 hit in the UK), "Joy to the World", and "Black and White". Dunhill Records claimed 40 million units sold by them.
Their use of songs by Randy Newman ("Mama Told Me Not to Come"), Laura Nyro ("Eli's Coming"), Hoyt Axton ("Joy to the World"), Elton John & Bernie Taupin ("Your Song"), and Leo Sayer ("The Show Must Go On") were the first major hits for songs by these singer/songwriters. They also popularized a song by Harry Nilsson ("One").
Joe Schermie quit in 1973 and was replaced by Jack Ryland. The band then became an eight-piece with the induction of another keyboards player, Skip Konte. By now Negron had become the principal vocalist, and a dissatisfied Hutton left the group in 1976; the group disbanded the following year, at least partly due to Negron's drug addiction problem.
In the mid-1980s, Three Dog Night began appearing again, and as of 2006 they are touring actively. The current lineup features founding members Wells and Hutton on lead vocals, keyboardist Greenspoon and guitarist Allsup, with new members Paul Kingery on bass & vocals and Pat Bautz on drums.
In October of 2006 the new lineup of Three Dog Night played at Walt Disney World as part of Epcot's "Eat to the Beat" series. Wells and Hutton sang some of the songs originally led by Negron ("Joy to the World" and "Easy to Be Hard") as well as their own lead vocal hits (including "Black and White," "Never Been to Spain," and "Shambala").
Joe Schermie died on March 26, 2002 of a heart attack. His long-term drug abuse as well as that of various other members of the group were chronicled in harrowing memoirs by Greenspoon (One is a Lonely Number) and Negron (Three Dog Nightmare).
[edit] Discography
- Three Dog Night (1969)
- "One" (US chart #5)
- "Try a Little Tenderness" (#29)
- Suitable for Framing (1969)
- "Eli's Coming" (#10)
- "Easy to Be Hard" (#4)
- "Celebrate" (#15)
- Captured Live at the Forum (1969)
- It Ain't Easy (1970)
- "Mama Told Me (Not to Come)" (#1)
- "Out in the Country" (#15)
- Naturally (1970)
- "One Man Band" (#19)
- "Liar" (#7)
- "Joy to the World" (#1)
- Golden Bisquits (1971)
- Harmony (1971)
- "Never Been to Spain" (#5)
- "The Family of Man" (#12)
- "An Old Fashioned Love Song" (#4)
- Seven Separate Fools (1972)
- "Black and White" (#1)
- "Pieces of April" (#19)
- Around the World With Three Dog Night (1973)
- Cyan (1973)
- "Shambala" (#3)
- "Let Me Serenade You" (#17)
- Hard Labor (1974)
- "Sure As I'm Sittin' Here" (#16)
- "The Show Must Go On" (#4)
- "Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)" (#33)
- Joy to the World: Their Greatest Hits (1974)
- Coming Down Your Way (1975)
- "Til The World Ends" (#32)
- American Pastime (1976)
- The Best of 3 Dog Night (1982)
- It's a Jungle (1983)
- Celebrate: The Three Dog Night Story, 1965-1975 (1993)
- Live with the Tennessee Symphony Orchestra [DVD] (2002)
- The Complete Hit Singles (2004)
- 35th Anniversary Hits Collection (2004, live with the London Symphony Orchestra)
[edit] Awards & Recognition
Three Dog Night was inducted into The Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2000.

