When planning your wedding ceremony music, a common questions wedding planners receive is, “How many songs to be performed during the ceremony and where should they go?” There are no hard set rules and there is no wrong way to do it. The following is a useful set of guidelines you can use while planning your wedding reception music.
Prelude music performed prior to the beginning of the wedding ceremony, while arriving guests are being seated. For the prelude, you may select a pianist a guitar player or a string quartet. The music played in the prelude is more often than not instrumental.
Common classical songs include:
Air on a G String by Bach
Ave Verum Corpus by Mozart
Water Music (Air) by Handel
Serenade by Schubert
Processional music performed while the wedding party enters the wedding ceremony site. The processional is meant to announce your arrival. The guests will stand as you make your way toward the center point.
Common processional pieces are:
Canon in D by Pachelbel
Concerto in D Major by Vivaldi
Trumpet Voluntary by Clarke
Wedding March by Mozart
Ceremony music...