How a Bucks County Rock Group’s Album Influenced the Creation of SpongeBob SquarePants

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children's shows
Image via iStock.
The nautical themes and cover artwork of the group's sixth album had a profound impact on the show's creator.

One of the most popular children’s shows of all time might not have existed were it not for an album by a rock group from Bucks County.

Ween, a widely popular rock band from New Hope, released its sixth studio album, “The Mollusk,” in 1997. With underlying themes of maritime adventures and nautical mystique, the album became one of the group’s most beloved works, with the two main members calling it their favorite.

Around this same time, a California marine biologist-turned-cartoonist named Stephen Hillenburg was planning on making a show that would combine his love of the sea and its vast wildlife with the entertainment of characters like Bugs Bunny.

Upon listing to the Bucks County group’s album, something clicked.

The Visual Style

Along with the album’s songs, the cover, created by artist Storm Thorgerson of “The Dark Side of the Moon” fame, depicted a large monster under the sea, made up of a fish, a shrimp, and an octopus.

The whole package that the album brought to the table was just the thing that Hillenburg needed for inspiration, and not soon after, the first pictures of SpongeBob SquarePants came to be.

Incorporating Music

The show’s creator reached out to the band to tell them how the album influenced the yet-to-be-released kids’ show. He asked if they could create a song for an episode where the titular character needs to learn how to tie his shoes. They recorded the song “Loop de Loop” in one night and it eventually ended up on the episode “Your Shoe’s Untied” in the show’s second season in 2001.

“It remains one of our proudest legacies and we went on to do a lot of work together with SpongeBob, and the show went on to be the best cartoon of two generations,” the band wrote on Facebook after Hillenburg’s death in 2018. The band is currently gearing up for a tour of the country this summer.

The Big Screen

In 2004, the band gained a boost in popularity after its song “Ocean Man,” featured on a 1997 release, closed out The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie.

In a way, this was the album’s influence coming full circle, and fans of the show and movie remember the band for their catchy song, as well as the impact it had on the character’s creation.

Learn more about the band’s impact on the show at Ween.

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Ween – “Loop de Loop”/”Ocean Man” Live at The Met in Philadelphia in a 2018 concert.

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