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Planning your Wedding Music: Recessionals

February 3, 2012 by david

The wedding recessional is an important part of any ceremony, as it serves as a bridge from wedding to reception, in both formality and mood. The music is joyful, upbeat, and loud! For a classical music wedding, there are many choices. Here are some of the most popular, as well as a few unusual alternatives.


Mendelssohn – Wedding March from ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’
The war-horse of the wedding recessional, it became a wedding staple after its use in the 1858 wedding of Queen Victoria’s daughter to Prince Frederick William of Prussia. Quite lengthy if played in full, it can easily serve as a combined recessional and postlude.

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Mendelssohn_WeddingMarch-2011.mp3

Handel – Hornpipe from ‘Water Music Suite 2 in D’
Second in popularity only to the Mendelssohn, Handel’s original prominently featured trumpets and horns. First heard in 1717, this music was not composed for a wedding, but rather as entertainment for George I of England and his friends as they floated down the Thames on a barge!

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Alla-Hornpipe.mp3

Handel La Réjouissance from ‘Music for the Royal Fireworks’
Another popular choice from the music of Handel, La Réjouissance (literally, ‘The Rejoicing’) was premiered in 1749 at a somewhat disastrous outdoor concert celebrating the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle. The piece is not very long, and is most suitable for shorter recessionals, as it can become somewhat tedious if repeated too many times.

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/La-Rejouissance.mp3

Stanley – Trumpet Voluntary in D
Sometimes heard as a processional as well, this is actually one of many “trumpet voluntaries” by English baroque composer John Stanley. Though frequently performed on trumpet, it was not actually composed for trumpet at all. The piece is one movement from a longer work for organ (called a Voluntary). In this particular section, the composer calls for the right-hand melody to be played using the ‘trumpet stop’ on the organ – hence a trumpet voluntary!

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Stanley_TrumpetVoluntary.mp3

Clarke – Duke of Gloucester’s March
Jeremiah Clarke is best known for two common processionals that for many decades were erroneously attributed to Henry Purcell – the famous Trumpet Tune and equally famous Prince of Denmark’s March. The Duke of Gloucester’s March was one of many pieces written in honor of the child prince William, Duke of Gloucester. It was recently featured as the bridal processional in the 2010 wedding of Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden.

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Duke-of-Gloucesters-March.mp3

Filed Under: Event Planning, Wedding Music Tagged With: event planning, recessional, wedding music

Planning Your Wedding Music: Ultra-Traditional

January 29, 2012 by david

English: View at Lucerne, water color by Felix...

Choosing wedding music can be a daunting challenge, but if you are planning a very traditional ceremony, you may also simply want to use traditional music. While there is no “official” or historic list, the four pieces below represent the music you are most likely to hear in movie, soap opera, and royal weddings. There have been years when these pieces represented 75% or more of the ceremonies we performed. While tastes are changing, this set remains a popular choice for traditional brides.


Seating of Honored Guests

Bach – Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring

A famous chorale movement from the Cantata Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben (BWV 147) of J.S. Bach, featuring a melody by Johann Schop, this popular piece is more atmospheric than processional, making it a favorite for seating of mothers and other honored guests.

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Bach-Jesu-Joy-2012.mp3

Processional of the Bridal Party

Pachelbel – Canon in D

A piece which needs no introduction, and which begins with perhaps the recognizable 8 note sequence in all of classical music. While possibly composed for the wedding of J.C. Bach in 1694, the piece was not well known until its republication in 1919, and the first commercial recording was issued in 1940. In spite of its near ubiquity, it is really a ‘modern traditional’.

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Pachelbel-Canon-2012.mp3

Bridal Processional

Wagner – Bridal Chorus from ‘Lohengrin’

Another of the most recognized melodies in Western music, in Wagner’s opera it is actually sung after the wedding, as a processional from the altar to the bridal chamber, with the wedding party singing:

Faithfully guided, draw near
to where the blessing of love shall preserve you!
Triumphant courage, the reward of love,
joins you in faith as the happiest of couples!
Champion of virtue, proceed!
Jewel of youth, proceed!
Flee now the splendour of the wedding feast,
may the delights of the heart be yours!

This sweet-smelling room, decked for love,
now takes you in, away from the splendour.
Faithfully guided, draw now near
to where the blessing of love shall preserve you!
Triumphant courage, love so pure,
joins you in faith as the happiest of couples!

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Wagner-Bridal-Chorus-2011.mp3

Recessional

Mendelssohn – Wedding March from ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’

Composed by Felix Mendelssohn in 1842 as part of a suite of incidental music for a production of Shakespeare’s play, it quickly became a wedding favorite. Its appearance in the 1858 wedding of the daughter of Queen Victoria to Prince Frederick William of Prussia ensured an early entrance into the traditional wedding playlist.

https://fourstrings.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Mendelssohn_WeddingMarch-2011.mp3
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Filed Under: Event Planning, Wedding Music Tagged With: event planning, wedding music

12 Nov 2011 – Benton/Thiesen Wedding – Denton Bible Church

December 7, 2011 by david

A wedding-reception combo this time, for Catherine Benton and Matthew Thiesen, held in the chapel of Denton Bible Church. The wedding itself was strictly classical, but the quartet switched to its pop/rock configuration (revolution4) for the reception.

Prelude:
Suite in G Major (Water Music) – Handel
The Girl with the Flaxen Hair – Debussy
March from Song of the Birth of Our Lord Jesus Christ – Charpentier
Rhosymedre – Vaughan-Williams
Hymn Medley
Marche from Occasional Oratorio – Handel
Air from Suite in F Major (Water Music) – Handel

Ceremony:
Seating of the Families: Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring – Bach
Bridal Party Processional: I-Allegro from Autumn (The Four Seasons) – Vivaldi
Bridal Processional: I-Allegro from Suite in D Major (Water Music) – Handel
Hymn: Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing – Wyeth
Recessional: II-Hornpipe from Suite in D Major (Water Music) – Handel

Reception:
Home – Michael Buble (First Dance)
Viva la Vida – Coldplay
Baby What a Big Surprise – Chicago
Here There & Everywhere – The Beatles
Love Left to Lose – Sons of Sylvia
You Make My Dreams – Hall & Oates
Beautiful – Christina Aguilera
Boomerang – Plain WHite T’s
Love Walks In – Van Halen
You’ve Got a Friend in Me – Randy Newman
Something – The Beatles
Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da – The Beatles
Let Love Rule – Lenny Kravitz

Musicians:
Clare Adkins Cason – Violin
Michelle Brians – Violin
Amber Sander – Viola
David Cason – Violoncello

Filed Under: Receptions, Weddings Tagged With: Denton, Denton Bible Church, four strings, revolution4, rock music, string quartet, weddings

29 October 2011 – Nikisher/Smith Wedding – Parkway Baptist Church

November 8, 2011 by david

Four Strings performed as a string trio for the wedding of Nicole Nikisher and Ryan Smith. The ceremony was held at Parkway Baptist Church in McKinney TX on October 29, 2011. The chapel boasts remarkable (and somewhat unexpected) acoustics for live strings.

Prelude:
Air from Orchestral Suite No. 3 – Bach
Fanfare from Première Suite de Symphonies – Mouret
Arioso from Cantata 156 – Bach
Aria from Suite in G Major (Water Music) – Handel
Trumpet Tune – Purcell
Panis Angelicus – Franck
Trumpet Tune and Trumpet March – Clarke
March from Song of the Birth of Our Lord Jesus Christ – Charpentier
Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring – Bach

Ceremony:
Seating of the Families: Air from Suite in F (Water Music) – Handel
Bridal Party Processional: Marche from Occasional Oratorio – Handel
Bridal Processional: Trumpet Voluntary – Clarke
Rose Ceremony: Wedding from Seabiscuit – Newman
Recessional: Wedding March from A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Mendelssohn
Postlude: Hornpipe from Suite in D Major (Water Music) – Handel

Musicians:
Clare Adkins Cason – Violin
Corinia Maxson – Violin
David Cason – Violoncello

Filed Under: Weddings Tagged With: four strings, McKinney, Parkway Baptist Church, string quartet, weddings

15 October 2011 – Ingram 60th Anniversary – Redeemer Presbyterian

November 8, 2011 by david

Four Strings provided a quartet for the 60th Anniversary Reception of J.R. and Margaret Ingram, held at Redeemer Presbyterian Church in McKinney, TX on October 15, 2011.

Program:
Suite No. 2 in D Major (Water Music) – Handel
String Quartet K.156 – Mozart
Emperor Waltz – Strauss
String Quartet K.172 – Mozart
Tales from the Vienna Woods – Strauss

Musicians:
Clare Adkins Cason – Violin
Corinia Maxson – Violin
Meghan Birmingham – Viola
David Cason – Violoncello

Filed Under: Anniversaries Tagged With: anniversaries, four strings, string quartet

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