Sponge was one of the more underrated groups in the post-grunge boom of the mid-'90s. When they were on top of their game -- as evidenced by the hits "Plowed" and "Molly (Sixteen Candles)" -- the band's songs had a knack for jangly riffs and catchy, anthemic hard rock hooks, despite being wrapped in the fuzzy guitars and brooding seriousness that typified grunge music.
Sponge grew out of a Detroit-based hard rock act called
Loudhouse, which released an album on the Virgin label in 1988 before losing its record contract and disbanding shortly thereafter. Drummer-turned-vocalist
Vinnie Dombrowski (born
Mark Dombrowski) and guitarists
Mike Cross and
Joey Mazzola regrouped as
Sponge in 1992, adding
Mike's brother
Tim Cross on bass and
Jimmy Paluzzi on drums. Adapting their '70s hard rock influences to fit the grunge zeitgeist, the bandmates earned a major-label deal with Columbia and released their debut album,
Rotting Pinata, in late 1994.
Initially, critics compared
Sponge unfavorably to
Stone Temple Pilots, but alternative radio embraced the band's first two singles: the driving rocker "Plowed" and the jangly, introspective "Molly (Sixteen Candles)." A third single, "Rainin'," also earned airplay, and
Rotting Pinata went gold; meanwhile,
Sponge went on tour as
Live's opening act. With new drummer
Charlie Grover in tow, their 1996 follow-up album,
Wax Ecstatic, was a more diverse affair, rediscovering some of the band's roots in arena rock, British glam, and jangle pop. Even though singles like "Wax Ecstatic (To Sell Angelina)," "I Am Anastasia," and "Have You Seen Mary" enjoyed some degree of radio airplay, Columbia was dissatisfied with the sales figures and dropped
Sponge once the album left the charts.
Undaunted,
Sponge signed a new deal with the Beyond label, which released the more classicist
New Pop Sunday in 1999. It attracted little commercial attention, and more personnel shifts ensued. Tired of touring, the
Cross brothers both left and were replaced by guitarist
Kurt Marschke and bassist Tim Krukowski;
Billy Adams also came on board as the new drummer. After several years of recharging -- during which time
Dombrowski played in several Detroit-area side projects --
Sponge returned with
For All the Drugs in the World in 2003 and
Man in 2005.
Dombrowski reworked the lineup once again, this time adding guitarists
Kyle Neely and
Andy Patalan, before returning again to the studio in 2007 to record
Galore Galore for Bellum Records. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide