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How to Plan Your Wedding Ceremony Music and Make Your Song Selections

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By crussell
User-Submitted Article
(5 Ratings)
Wedding Ceremony Music
Wedding Ceremony Music
Elegala.com - Elegant Galas Made Simple

From the moment the guests file in, your music has the power to set the tone for your ceremony. With such a variety of options available and so much riding on the selection, choosing your music can seem a daunting task. Plan your wedding ceremony music with these tips on selecting your ceremony musicians and selecting the tunes for the different components of the ceremony.

Difficulty: Easy
Instructions
  1. Step 1

    Consult Your Ceremony Site -
    Be sure to consult with your ceremony site before making your musical selections. Many places of worship do not allow secular music and have strict rules about what songs may be used. If you are holding an outdoor wedding ceremony, make sure that your ceremony musicians will have a place to set up and, most importantly, be heard.

  2. Step 2

    Determine Your Ceremony Music Style -
    Setting the theme for the entire wedding ceremony, the site will help determine the type of ceremony musicians you use. Steel drums may be perfect for an outdoor beach ceremony, while a bold trumpet quartet will sound impressive in an elaborate cathedral.

  3. Step 3

    Select Your Ceremony Songs -
    Once you have established an overall theme and selected your ceremony musicians, you will need to choose the specific music selections for the different components of the wedding ceremony. The link to popular wedding songs in the resources section at the bottom of this article will help you get started with categorized lists of the most requested tunes for each component of your ceremony and reception. Here are some song selection tips for each part of the ceremony:

    - Prelude
    The seats are filling, and the sanctuary is buzzing with guests meeting, greeting and anticipating the big event. Your music selections during the prelude will set the mood for the ceremony; gentle jazz or chamber music works perfectly here. The music should not overpower the mood; rather, it should compliment the budding excitement.

    - Pre-processional
    This is a generally solemn moment as important family members are seated. As loving family members relinquish their children into a new life and family, the ceremony music should reflect the significance of the occasion. While the choice is yours, traditional ceremony music usually works best here.

    - Processional
    As the wedding party appears at the head of the wedding aisle, the ceremony musicians will switch from the pre-processional to the processional. Consider a tempo that permits the wedding party to walk at an exact pace while heightening the suspense for the wedding guests.

    - Bride's Entrance
    This is the moment that you and your guests have anxiously awaited. The ceremony music should reflect the excitement and be dramatic and sweeping. The traditional selection is Wagner's Bridal Chorus (Here Comes the Bride), but many brides are not afraid to insert something a little more reflective of their unique personality. Whatever you choose should be bold and exciting and comfortable for you. Take a deep breath and walk...this is your moment.

    - Recessional
    You did it! You're now man and wife, and the music you play while you and your new spouse walk up the aisle should reflect that excitement and elation. Have your ceremony musicians play something something joyous and upbeat. The traditional selection is Mendelssohn's Wedding March.

Comments  

acole said

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on 9/2/2008 This is an excellent article for a bride-to-be. This was about the hardest part of planning my wedding.

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