Mark,
You're going to laugh, but I played for my own wedding (via cassette I made while playing a wedding gig with trumpet soloist) and rumor has it that I'll probably play for my own funeral. :) Anyway, we eloped at the beach in 2000. The processional was "Trumpet Duet (Two Trumpets and Timpani)" by John Stanley (edited/arranged by S. Drummond Wolff) and the recessional was David N. Johnson's "Trumpet Tune in A Major" (beginning from the middle "fanfares"). Contact me off list if you're interested...I probably have .aiff files somewhere around here if you can't find mp3s online.
Good luck!
Thurletta Brown-Gavins

On Mon, 15 May 2006 13:01:04 -0400, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Message: 6
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 13:00:28 -0700
From: Mark D Lew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Finale] TAN: processional music, recommendation wanted
To: Finale-List 3 <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
I want to tap the collective knowledge of the List for a personal
project. As a few of you know, I'm getting married in two weeks. In
spite of my usual advocacy of live music, from the days when I too was
a professional musician, we're going with recorded music. One thing we
haven't found yet is the right piece for processional music.
Ericka loves the well-known Pachelbel canon in D. Objectively, I too
think it's a great piece, and it suits our needs in almost every
respect. The one problem is that I've heard it so many times that for
me it carries of a connotation of generic wedding ritual, which is (1)
not a really positive feeling for me and (2) something I would never be
able to personally connect to and think of as really "ours".
So in brief, we're looking something that has the essential qualities
of the Pachelbel canon but which is obscure enough that thousands of
other couples haven't already discovered it. If you have some favorite
piece that you've always felt would be a perfect wedding processional,
I'm inviting you to recommend it.
It can't, however, be *too* obscure. The chosen piece has to be
something we can get on a digital recording, and it needs to be
something we can listen to before buying. My standard strategy is to
borrow CDs from the public library for auditioning, but for those out
there who like to send clips, I promise not to complain if you fill up
my email inbox with binaries for this purpose.
Other possibly pertinent information:
* Aside from basic structural features (tempo, etc), what most appeals
about the Pachelbel canon is the sense of quiet joy that wells up in
it. As a counter-example, one of the also-ran candidates, Bach's Air on
a G String, had the right pace and general mood but was deemed to be
too solemn and introspective and not celebratory enough.
* I'm basically thinking in terms of the 1650-1750 era, with some sort
of standard chamber music instrumentation, but I'm not stuck on that,
if some other era or style can accomplish the same goals.
* The wedding will be outside, in a lovely garden-like setting. There
will be about 70 guests, including lots of young children. Our
procession will be non-standard, with bride and groom entering
simultaneously from different directions and meeting in the middle.
thanks
mdl



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