Meet Moghul

About

Composing Influence

Moghul Veyron's career in film scoring and music production spans two decades and two continents from London recording studios to Hollywood sound stages. His credits include distinct film and documentary projects.

The Me You Can't See | Emmy-nominated · Apple TV+ · Oprah Winfrey & Prince Harry

City of Lies | Johnny Depp & Forest Whitaker · Score w/ Joe Perry of Aerosmith

The Infiltrator | Bryan Cranston & Diane Kruger

BBC Radio Rising Talent Award

Virgin EMI Artist Development

Produced Author for New York Times Bestseller

At the piano, Moghul draws on jazz improvisation not as a performance but as a way of thinking, a discipline of responding in real time, finding the emotional centre of a moment and building something coherent from what the room gives you. It is this instinct, developed across years of film scoring and live performance, that now sits at the heart of every keynote he delivers.

Adaptive Wisdom

Most frameworks treat wisdom as something you accumulate and apply. Moghul's work proposes something different: that wisdom moves in cycles, from knowing to not knowing and back again, and that the ability to cross that threshold consciously, to practice ignorance rather than conceal it is what separates leaders who adapt from those who stall.

He calls this Adaptive Wisdom. It is not a rejection of experience but a recalibration of how experience is held, loosely enough to be updated, firmly enough to act on. The philosophy draws on the Renaissance Humanist tradition of cross-disciplinary inquiry, applied to the practical realities of leadership, creativity, and change.

Perfectly Mundane

Moghul works primarily with Leica film cameras, documenting human life with an eye for the moments that pass unnoticed — the gradients of feeling that surface in ordinary situations, the narratives living inside everyday scenes. His work has been featured by both Leica and Kodak, recognized for its emotional attunement and its refusal to aesthetics at the expense of truth.

He calls this practice Perfectly Mundane: a search for the profound within the overlooked. In his keynotes, curated analogue photographs are woven into the session — not as decoration, but as a deliberate exercise in perception, training audiences to notice what they usually miss.

Guiding Narratives

Moghul has advised on national campaigns in partnership with the Mayor of London, and developed keynote speakers who have addressed Fortune 500 organizations including Google, Pinterest and Disney. His consulting work is built on a single conviction: that most people and organizations have an understanding of what they're trying to say, they just haven't found the form that makes it connect.

His process is collaborative rather than prescriptive. He works alongside founders, leaders, and teams to surface the through line in their work, the bigger story they're actually telling and shape it into a narrative that creates cognitive ease.

Restoring Depth in a Fast World

Across film, music, photography, and the keynote stage, Moghul's work points toward a single aim: to create experiences that slow people down, sharpen their attention, and return them to a richer relationship with their own perception. This commitment extends to his charitable work for the Sheila Kar Health Foundation, a renowned cardiologist in Beverly Hills.

Whether through sound, image, story, or conversation, the work has the same pulse, find what is already present and making it impossible to ignore.