February 2026

LaMonte McLemore, co-founder of The 5th Dimension dies at 90

Photo Credit: Benny Clay via press release

LaMonte McLemore, a founding member of the 5th Dimension and a celebrated celebrity and sports photographer, died Tuesday morning, February 3, at his home in Las Vegas. He was 90. McLemore passed from natural causes following a stroke suffered several years ago and was surrounded by his wife of 30 years and family.

As a core voice in the 5th Dimension, McLemore helped shape a sleek, genre-blending sound that reshaped American pop and soul in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The group scored era-defining hits including “Up, Up and Away” and “Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In”, earning Grammy Awards for Record of the Year in 1968 and 1970. Both recordings were later inducted into the GRAMMY Hall of Fame. The “Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In” medley topped the Billboard Hot 100 for six weeks in the spring of 1969 and remains one of the signature recordings of its generation. Other major hits included the Number 1″ Wedding Bell Blues”)” and the enduring “Stoned Soul Picnic,” alongside seven gold albums and six platinum singles.

Born September 17, 1935, in St. Louis, Missouri, McLemore served in the United States Navy, where he trained as an aerial photographer, launching a lifelong parallel career behind the camera. He later pursued professional baseball in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ farm system, becoming one of the first African Americans to participate, before settling in Southern California and turning fully to music and photography.

McLemore co-founded the 5th Dimension in Los Angeles alongside Billy Davis Jr., Florence LaRue, Marilyn McCoo, and Ron Townson. Known for his warm bass vocals and steady presence, he helped anchor the group’s sophisticated harmonies and modern pop sensibility. The group became fixtures on television variety shows and toured internationally, including a 1973 State Department cultural tour that brought American pop music behind the Iron Curtain.

Away from the stage, McLemore built a distinguished reputation as a photographer, capturing athletes, entertainers, and cultural figures across decades. His work appeared regularly in Jet magazine and stands as a visual chronicle of 20th-century popular culture.

In recent years, McLemore and the 5th Dimension reached new audiences through their appearance in Questlove’s Oscar-winning documentary Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), which revisited the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival and its lasting impact.

In 2014, McLemore co-authored the autobiography From Hobo Flats to The 5th Dimension: A Life Fulfilled in Baseball, Photography, and Music, reflecting on a life that moved fluidly between music, photography, and sports. His legacy endures through recordings that continue to resonate and images that captured history as it happened.

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Chuck Negron, Three Dog Night Co-founder Dies at 83

Photo Credit: David Plastik

Chuck Negron, the soaring tenor whose voice powered some of the most recognizable hits of late-60s and early-70s rock, has died at the age of 83. A founding member of Three Dog Night, Negron passed away on February 2, 2026, at his home in Studio City, California, following a period of declining health.

Born Charles Negron II on June 8, 1942, in Manhattan and raised in the Bronx, Negron found music early, singing in neighborhood doo-wop groups before relocating to Los Angeles on a basketball scholarship. Music soon eclipsed athletics, and in 1967 he joined Danny Hutton and Cory Wells to form Three Dog Night, a band built on vocal power, tight harmonies, and an uncanny instinct for great songs.

Negron’s voice quickly became the group’s emotional center. His performances on “One,” “Easy to Be Hard,” “An Old Fashioned Love Song,” and “The Show Must Go On” showcased a rare combination of range, clarity, and raw feeling. That voice reached its widest audience with “Joy to the World,” the band’s defining single and one of the most ubiquitous songs of its era. Between 1969 and 1974, Three Dog Night placed more songs on the charts than almost any other American act, turning outside compositions into radio staples and selling tens of millions of records worldwide.

Behind the success, Negron struggled. As fame intensified, so did his battle with addiction, a fight that eventually fractured relationships within the band and derailed his career. By the mid-1980s, he was out of Three Dog Night and facing the consequences of years of excess. His recovery was neither quick nor easy, but it proved enduring. After achieving sobriety in the early 1990s, Negron rebuilt his life, returned to music, and spoke openly about his experiences, offering hard-earned perspective rather than revisionist myth.

In later years, health issues limited his ability to tour, but his legacy never dimmed. His voice remained a benchmark for rock singers, admired for its power without strain and its emotional directness. Late in life, Negron reconciled with former bandmates, closing a long and complicated chapter with grace.

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