When planning your wedding ceremony music, wedding planners receive frequent questions is, "How many songs to be performed during the ceremony and where should they go?" There are no hard rules and there is no wrong way to do it. What follows is a set of useful guidelines that you can use in planning your wedding music.
Prelude - music played before the start of the wedding ceremony, while guests who come are seated. For the prelude, you can select a pianist or a guitarist with a string quartet. The music played in the prelude is usually decisive.
Joint classic songs include:
"Air G String" by Bach
"Ave Verum Corpus" by Mozart
Water Music (Air) "by Handel
"Serenade" by Schubert
Processional - wedding party and the music comes marriage site. The parade is intended to inform the arrival time. Guests standing as you do on the way to the center.
Common process components are:
"Canon D Pachelbel
"Concerto in D Major" by Vivaldi
"Trumpet Voluntary" by Clarke
"Wedding March" by Mozart
Ceremony - Music for the ceremony.
The songs are often used:
"Coronation March" by Walton
"Ode to Joy" from Beethoven
"Trumpet Tune in C" by Purcell
"Triumphal March" by Grieg
Recessional - music, like a wedding ceremony from the site. For many, this part of the ceremony is considered the most exciting. You are husband and wife. All customers stands on ceremony as you make out of the way to the site.
There are many options for this music and songs include:
"Brandenburg Concerto No. 4" by Bach
"Exsulate, Jubilate" by Mozart
"Rigaudon" by Campra
"The Four Seasons" by Vivaldi
Postlude - music played while guests leave the ceremony site, which is usually the same music for the prelude.
No matter what music you want to be sure that you can perform traditional music instruments like piano, organ, guitar or flute or the harp.
Home »Unlabelled » Music part of the Wedding Ceremony
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment