The Wedding Planner advises: The so-called “Wedding March” comes from “Lohengrin” a three-act opera by Richard Wagner, first staged in the 1850s. Jewish brides never use it because of the composer’s anti-Semitic views. Some Christian churches forbid it because of its secular nature and context. Some people decide against it as in the opera, it mostly marks the brides passage into what is doomed to be a tragic, failed marriage!Whatever the reason, some brides often look for other options. These days, two alternative pieces get overused: Pachebel’s “Canon in D” and Purcell’s “Voluntary,” which is also attributed as “The Prince of Denmark’s March,” by Clarke. This became very popular after Princess Diana used this piece of music in her 1981 wedding to Prince Charles.Whatever you choose you have to have a short theme as the musicians need to be able to stop the music in the right place.Maybe try “Eleanor Plunkett,” by Turlough O’Carolan, paired with “Skyeboat,” a traditional Irish piece, as a processional, then “Hewlitt,” also by O’Carolan, as a recessional if you are a couple “who want to dance out of the aisle.”March alternatives:
Processional
• Apothesis/Tchaikovsky
• Doxology
• Hymn Fanfare from The Triumphant/Couperin
• Fanfares/Sir Arthur Bliss • Fantasie in C/Franck
• La Cinquantaine (for the flower girl)
• March from Aida/Verdi
• March Nuptiale/Allan Caron
• Sarabande from Suite {nldr}11/Handel
• Sinfonia (Wedding Cantata)/Bach
• Theme from Fifth Symphony/Tchaikovsky
• To a Wild Rose/MacDowell (for the ushers)
• Wedding March/Guilmant
• Wedding Processional/(“The Sound of Music”)Recessional
• Air in D/Handel
• Allegro Maestoso in D/Handel
• Bell Symphony/Purcell
• Hornpipe (Water Music)/Handel
• Processional/from Xerces/Handel