I took this job at an advertising agency called DDB. Now this was a big deal for me because it represented a seismic shift in the direction I’d been taking my life, which was live production of theater, concerts, festivals, circuses, you name it. I’d worked thousands of live shows and I absolutely loved the work, the pressure, the results, but my daughter was a wee one and I couldn’t see missing every birthday, holiday and weekend because I was working.
Theater was a single person’s world and I wasn’t single. I needed some stability and a steady paycheck and with a little networking that became DDB. I may be the only person in the world that considered a switch to the advertising industry a move to a more stable environment, but back stage at rock and roll shows was the wild west, so an office on Madison Avenue struck me as the height of a genteel existence.
I didn’t have a clue who or what DDB was; I didn’t know a thing about advertising, its history or even what an ad was. DDB was like the Taj Mahal of creativity, I’d just never heard of the place. Looking back on it, I’d say that worked in my favor and taught me the value of naivety, or is that naivete. Doesn’t matter. It turned out not knowing what was going on was a solid way to function in such a complicated place and get creative results.
My job when I began was to produce advertising music. First day on the job they gave me dozens of reels and said listen to these, these are the companies we use. Okay, I listened. And listened. And listened. I didn’t get it. I’d been in music since I was eight years old but this was unlike any music I’d ever heard before. I didn’t recognize the forms, the tempos, the beats, the ideas, the words, it all seemed weird to my ears. What kind of music was this? What vibe did it fit? I just didn’t understand it and decided it was some sort of sub-genre I’d completely missed in my music education. Jingles.
And the budgets. I spent more on a thirty second piece of music for an aspirin commercial than I did producing Cosi Fan Tutti, complete with thirty musicians, lights, sets and an entire cast of opera singers. It was insane.
Being Mr. Popular never seemed the way to get high levels of creative done, and I quickly became an anathema to the established jingle companies in NYC, but I also inadvertently moved the bar for what a jingle was by simply applying basic laws of the song writing universe to ads and hiring new writers for the jobs; it was fun and crazy. At one point we produced the Kit Kat jingle straddling the toilet in this young composer’s loft. He didn’t have a clue what a ‘jingle’ was, but he wrote one hell of a catchy tune in his bumping around in the dark approach.
We did dozens of tunes in the next ten years with untried talent, and I always strived to wander into areas I hadn’t a clue how to function in. I’m still doing it. Keeps you fresh. Beginner’s mind. Never lose it.