The Gold Standard: The Medley as Biography
First, let's define what a great medley looks like. Think of Taylor Swift’s 2019 Artist of the Decade performance at the AMAs. It wasn’t just a collection of hits; it was a story. It moved, for the most part, chronologically, taking the audience on a journey from the innocent yearning of “Love Story” to the defiant synth-pop of “Blank Space” and the dark confidence of “I Knew You Were Trouble.” The performance built a narrative of artistic evolution. By the time she reached newer material like “The Man” and “Lover,” the inclusion felt earned. It was a chapter in a book we’d just finished reading together. The medley served the artist’s legacy first and the new album second. This is the crucial distinction: the performance was a celebration of a career,
and the audience was invited to celebrate with her. The promotion was a byproduct of the art, not its sole purpose.
The Commercial Break: The Medley as Playlist
Now, contrast that with the medleys that leave us feeling cold. These performances often feel less like a biography and more like a Spotify “New Music Friday” playlist brought to life. They typically feature an artist who has a new album to promote, and the structure betrays that objective immediately. The medley might kick off with a brand-new, unfamiliar single, followed by a slightly more recognizable recent hit, and then maybe, just maybe, a 30-second snippet of the classic song everyone was waiting for. The energy is disjointed. The audience is asked to invest in material they don’t know yet, without the performer first paying tribute to the shared history that brought them to that stage. Instead of a journey, it’s a series of disconnected promotional slots. The pacing is all wrong, and it creates a transactional feeling: “Sit through my new stuff to get to the old stuff you love.”
The Mistake: Forgetting the Narrative Contract
Herein lies the mistake: violating the unspoken narrative contract of a career-honoring medley. When an artist accepts an award like “Artist of the Year” or performs a multi-song set, the audience expects a story. We want to be reminded of why this artist matters. The mistake is structuring the performance around the artist's immediate commercial needs instead of the audience's emotional expectations. A great medley builds momentum by starting with a foundation of shared memories—the massive, culture-defining hits. This builds goodwill and energy. Once the crowd is fully on board, captivated by nostalgia and reminded of the artist’s power, then you can introduce the new song. At that point, it doesn't feel like an ad; it feels like the next logical step in the artist's story. The commercial-feeling medley gets this backward. It demands attention for the new material upfront, before it has done the work of winning the audience over.
Artful Promotion vs. Blatant Advertisement
Let’s be clear: every awards show performance is a commercial. No artist is taking the stage for charity. They are there to reinforce their brand, sell albums, and book tours. The difference is in the execution. An artist like P!nk, known for her acrobatic and emotionally raw medleys, understands this perfectly. Her performances are breathtaking spectacles that celebrate her catalog, and in doing so, they make you want to buy a ticket to her next show. The promotion is baked into the artistry. The mistake is when the artistry is stripped away, leaving only the raw, undisguised commercial impulse. It’s the difference between a master chef presenting a beautiful new dish as part of a tasting menu and a waiter simply dropping a plate on your table and saying, “Try this.” One feels like a gift; the other feels like an obligation.











