Storytelling in marketing boils down to taking your audiences on
a fantastic journey — along a winding road with surprising twists and
turns that keeps them highly engaged and yearning for more.
Consider
that our species fundamentally gains knowledge through stories and the
most impactful and memorable lessons occur when a number of the five
senses are stimulated in concert.
Recently I
experienced a multi sensory extravaganza of such inspiring proportions
that it lit up parts of my brain that I didn’t even know existed.
It
all started with the highly rated production that depicted the life and
times of the legendary jazz trumpet maestro Miles Davis (1926-1991) in a
movie titled Miles Ahead.
The biographical account of the artist is action packed, unlike
most movies of this genre, and kept me at the edge of my seat, which is
exactly what the director, Don Cheadle, intended.
Cheadle
took a big risk in this creative approach that revolved around a moment
in time and spun a drama about the trumpeter’s fall from grace and
bounce backability that characterised his long and prolific career, and
thus creating a dazzling visual representation of the man and his
demons.
It is ill advised to watch the movie before
reading the book, but I did it anyway because I received Miles, The
Autobiography as a Christmas gift soon after watching the film.
Written
in his own voice, the book provides a linear account of his upbringing,
his rise to stardom and the twilight years with a heavy dose of
American street slang and swearing that would make a sailor blush.
If he played his trumpet the way he wrote, he’d have died of starvation.
Anyone
in the creative field will empathise with Miles especially when he
narrates the inspiration behind his music and how he pieced his bands
carefully together to create new sounds and break new ground.
It wasn’t all hunky-dory and indeed the dark days of his life seem to have inexplicably propelled the man to new heights.
Through
the movie and the book I was able to see and sense the fire in his
belly that drove him to the edge of insanity but inspired him to create
the greatest jazz over six decades.
However, the
ultimate story, the real magic and the spell that forever binds you is
the one that is cast through the celebrated music that he composed and
played.
He may not have been able to write to save his
life but he could spin a tale with his trumpet that takes your soul to a
whole new level.
His discography of 149 albums is the
quintessential autobiography perceived through sound as it captures
your spirit and haunts your dreams; told like no one else can tell it.
Every time you hear his music, another chapter of his life unfolds, like a gift that keeps giving.
Every time you hear his music, another chapter of his life unfolds, like a gift that keeps giving.
Within
interactive advertising we cannot afford to wait a lifetime to tell a
compelling story but what my recent experience illustrates is that you
must find an angle, like they did with the movie; base it on a
underlying human truth, like he did with the autobiography; and it must
be filled with passion, as it is with his music.
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