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Celebrating the Opening Credits of The Tick

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Celebrating the Opening Credits of The Tick

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Celebrating the Opening Credits of The Tick

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Published on August 24, 2021

Screenshot: Fox
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The Tick animated series
Screenshot: Fox

Welcome to Close Reads! In this new series, Leah Schnelbach and guest authors will dig into the tiny, weird moments of pop culture—from books to theme songs to viral internet hits—that have burrowed into our minds, found rent-stabilized apartments, started community gardens, and refused to be forced out by corporate interests.

I have written extensively about how much I love The Tick. I think that Ben Edlund’s creation grew into the best critique of superhero genre we’ve ever had. Where Alan Moore dives into giant sociopolitical conspiracy theories, and Frank Miller blurs the lines between costumed hero and fascist vigilante, Edlund dug into the inherent ridiculousness of taking these characters seriously. And once he’d spent 20 years making superheroing seem silly, he turned the second live-action Tick into a heartfelt cry to choose love and creativity over violence.

But I’m not going to talk about any of that today. Today I’d like to talk to you about the theme song from The Tick, the cartoon. The one that ran on Fox from 1994-1996.

First, if you’ve never listened to it, off you go:

But now let’s talk about it. When Batman: The Animated Series hit TV it carried on from Tim Burton’s dark gothic vision by using Danny Elfman’s iconic theme theme. The Simpsons uses… Danny Elfman’s iconic theme. X-Men went for a dramatic piece of music that was bit more “action movie” than “gothic psychodrama”, but it still got you excited for whatever relationship troubles Cyclops and Jean would be exploring in this episode. Gargoyles? Gothic psychodrama, appropriately. Tiny Toons and Animaniacs both featured their main characters singing wacky songs that explained what you were about to see, so no matter when you tuned in, or how small you were, you could follow the episode. Ducktales, Talespin, and Chip ‘n’ Dale’s Rescue Rangers all opened with slick, action-packed songs sung by Disney-approved singers. These were all professional shows with songs that were engineered to get your ass on the floor in front of the TV. Then they explained themselves and set you up for 22 minutes of fun fucking hijinks—and 8 minutes of the real stars of the show, the advertisements.

But not The Tick.

The Tick’s theme song opens with a buzzing alarm clock. It’s 6:30am, time for Arthur to get up and go to his job as an accountant—but no! The theme song swoops in, starting as a jazzy riff, before exploding into a man—or possibly several men—scatting nonsense syllables with increasing urgency over a cacophony of frantic horns.

e.g.:

“Da-da dweee! Da-da dwee dowww!”

[horn flourish]

AAAAHHHHHH

And what accompanies this soundtrack? Disconnected, extraordinary images! Monstrous skyscrapers bend down to eat people, 10-story tall mustachioed alligators roar into the sky, a nervous-looking man in a moth suit flies, a man dressed as a bat (but not that one) rappels onto a roof, and a woman clad in the American flag backflips across a room. A giant blue creature…with antennae…wrestles an even giant-er writhing tongue (???) and then holds a bomb as it explodes. As the smoke clears, you see that he is unharmed.

If you’re not familiar with The Tick’s whole deal—if you don’t already know what’s going on—you have NO IDEA what’s going on. Who are these people? What do they want with you???

Buy the Book

Battle of the Linguist Mages
Battle of the Linguist Mages

Battle of the Linguist Mages

And then the music peters out, as “da-da dwee”s fade, and The Tick’s logo smashes into a wall of flame. It honestly sounds like the singer thought better of the whole enterprise and quietly backed out of the recording studio.

Hey, you want some actual facts? The theme was written and scatted by Doug Katsaros. He’s worked with everyone from Cher to Liza Minelli to Christina Aguilera, and he wrote the goddamn Mennen jingle. But for this assignment he embraced a surreal style that perfectly matched the anarchy of The Tick, and he made Saturday morning even better than it already was.

This intro is one-minute long, and I am physically incapable of thinking about this single minute of music without laughing. I’ve tried—seriously, as I’ve been writing I have tried so hard not to laugh and I’m failing. I’m failing right now, as I type this.

The level of self-assurance and vision on display here! The way the show’s creators trusted their audience to embrace the weirdness of this opening minute of TV while every other cartoon explained itself to the breathless, sugared-encrusted children sitting inches from the screen. The Tick has brought me a lot of happiness over the years, and I’ve loved each of its iterations, but I have to say that when I think of the character, it’s this single minute of joy that I think of most often.

 

Leah Schnelbach cannot tell you how much it means to start this column off with a love letter to The Tick. Come tell them about your favorite pop cultural moments on Twitter!

About the Author

Leah Schnelbach

Author

Intellectual Junk Drawer from Pittsburgh.
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3 years ago

The Tick is one of my favorite franchises, and the cartoon was the start for me, and this theme song/intro… *chef’s kiss*. I love it so.

 

Excellent start to a new series of articles.

Avatar
3 years ago

The Tick was one of those shows my son and I bonded over back in the day. Watching it again brings back great memories. “Can’t…do…plaid.”

JLaSala
3 years ago

Brilliant stuff. Damn, I need to watch these again. This time I’m grabbing my young, unsuspecting son and plunging down that big blue rabbit hole. He’s going down with me.

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Dean Bryant
3 years ago

“Spoon!”

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Sean K
3 years ago

I started with the Tick when it was in its original comic run by Edlund (the first one I read was issue 10, which had me in stitches the whole way through).  I loved the cartoon series, and it is so far the only TV Tick that I’ve seen all of.  I actually think of the theme with some frequency, as it’s so catchy in its silliness.

“These aren’t baked goods; they’re baked bads!”

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3 years ago

Ah, the last year of high school/first couple years of college, hung over and stoned on a Saturday morning. Good times. I recently got my kids into this and while it hasn’t quite supplanted more recent fare like the MCU, Avatar, Dragon Prince, and She-Ra, it’s right below those. Too bad it’s impossible to get the complete series on DVD and as far as I know it’s also not streaming anywhere.

While the intro definitely requires more effort than the average fare of the time, it does still sort of serve the same function since every single sequence/image used is taken from an episode of the show. If I recall correctly they even updated it for each season, which means that the title sequence must have been one of the last things they completed for each season.

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3 years ago

Enjoyed in the ’90s because it was silly, enjoyed it around 2010 again (…did I rent a DVD?) because of the sly humour that was subversive without being mean-spirited. The cartoon opening is so distinctive that I’ve idly wondered about it several times, so there you go! And there are still parts of the show, even subtle ones, that make me laugh pretty much every time I remember them (e.g. the fact that one of the episodes is called ‘The Tick vs. Arthur’s Bank Account’).

jere7my
3 years ago

I always wanted the URL for the Tick’s website to be thetick.dwee.dot.dweedow.

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Xammblu
3 years ago

Literally just watched this yesterday after noticing that Hulu added The Tick back into their rotation! 

beautyinruins
3 years ago

“Da-da dweee! Da-da dwee dowww!”

 

Boy, does that bring back memories! I was a fan of the comics when that cartoon came out, and it was the most perfectly realized imagining I could have ever hoped for. 

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3 years ago

I will never forget Chairface.  A villainous mastermind who’s only superpower is that is his face is a chair. 

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3 years ago

 “laundry”

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JoeK
3 years ago

I can’t find the article online anymore, but Doug Katsaros mentions in an interview that he had the song written as an instrumental and went in to present it. Because he didn’t know the budget, he just scatted the tune, mentioning that “we’ll have horns here” and “this will be an orchestral crescendo”. When he was done, Ben Edlund said that what Doug had planned was just fine, but he preferred the rendition that Doug had just finished. And that’s the way it happened.

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Gerald Fnord
3 years ago

Don’t omit that “The Tick” put probably sorely needed cash in the pockets of the Firesign Theatre, or at least Phil Proctor.

 

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3 years ago

Oh, man. This takes me back. I started with the comics at NEC, and they’re around here somewhere, still packed through the last 3 moves. (I know where the vintage, wrap-around ninja hedge t-shirt is, at least.) I’d totally forgotten the joy of this earworm, wriggling happily in my brain once again. Also… fondest memories of Little Wooden Boy.

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Doug Katsaros
3 years ago

Hey Leah! Such a nice article to find this morning! JoeK is correct about the beginnings of the piece. Sadly, the theme got shorter as the years went on because the producers figured they could squeeze one more commercial into the show. All of the music that I wrote for every episode of the show is available online in a collection called “Spoon (The original music from the original animated “The Tick”) on all of the usual music outlets. Enjoy, and thank you for being a fan!!

Best,

Doug Katsaros

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Italapas
3 years ago

 @@@@@olethros6 I found all the episodes of the 1990’s cartoon on youtube! I’ve been rewatching ’em with the kiddo and loving every minute of it!

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3 years ago

@13, obviously Mr. Katsaros has confirmed the story (so cool you are here sir, it’s great work!) but I did find a link to that interview before I saw his post, it’s:

http://cliqueclack.com/tv/2012/02/08/tick-doug-katsaros-interview/

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Jeff Walther
3 years ago

It’s fantastic to see that I’m not alone in loving that intro.  Actually, I adored the entire animated series and I was in my 30s when first exposed.   Maybe I’m an old kid.

The intro is just so breathtakingly awesome.   Every short scene seems to meld perfectly with music.

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russellmz
3 years ago

american maid was the best superheroine in any comicbook medium

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