"Marlin March" was composed by Sage Guyton and Jeremy Wakefield. It features a steel guitar and ukulele being played.
Ego Plum remixed bits of this track in "SpongeBob in RandomLand."
Usage
Episodes
- 70a. "Chimps Ahoy" - SpongeBob and Patrick begin inventing. (sped up)
- 71b. "Karate Island" - SpongeBob is excited to go to Karate Island. (slowed down)
- 74a. "Bummer Vacation" - SpongeBob is excited to take a vacation. (sped up)
- 78a. "Born to Be Wild" - SpongeBob is jellyfishing.
- 100b. "Stanley S. SquarePants" - SpongeBob shows Sandy his cousin.
- 104a. "Not Normal" - Title card.
- 105a. "The Splinter" - The ending. (sped up)
- 107a. "Giant Squidward" - Giant Squidward becomes helpful. (sped up)
- 108b. "Plankton's Regular" - Title card.
- 110b. "Grooming Gary" - Title card.
- 152a. "Big Sister Sam" - Sister Sam leaves (high-pitched +1, sped up) / "Gee, isn't my sister something?" (high-pitched +1, normal speed)
- 167b. "Bubble Buddy Returns" - The ending.
- 194a. "Patrick! The Game" - Title card (sped up) / Bubble wipe. (normal speed)
- 207a. "Mimic Madness" - Title card (slowed down); Patrick, Sandy, Mr. Krabs, and Plankton imitate SpongeBob. (normal speed)
- 271b. "C.H.U.M.S" - Title card. (sped up)
- 282b. "Ain't That the Tooth" - The opening.
- 285b. "Ride Patrick Ride" - SpongeBob demonstrates how to pedal.
Shorts
- "Sandy's Vacation in Ruins" - Title card.
Trivia
- Seasons 4, 6, and 13 are the only seasons to play this track in more than one episode (with season 4 using it in 4 episodes, season 6 using it in 5 episodes and season 13 — in 3 episodes).
- Since its introduction, season 11, 12 and 14 are the only seasons to not use this track.
- Between "Mimic Madness" and "C.H.U.M.S," this track took 4 years and 8 months to return.
- Between "Mimic Madness" and "Ain't That the Tooth," this track took 6 years and 4 months to return outside a title card.
- "Big Sister Sam" is the only episode to play this track in a different pitch.
- "Born to Be Wild" is the first episode to use this track in normal speed.