I said I'd open with 'Be My Baby'. I'd be termpted to close with 'Reel Around The Fountain' but maybe the Paris Sisters' 'I Love How You Love Me' would be a less controversial choice. I'd have to learn how to slow dance first.
n.
― Nick Dastoor, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
My choice: "Nothing Matters When We're Dancing" by the Magnetic Fields Her choice: "Cars With The Boom" by L'Trimm
I have to admit her choice was cooler.
― Tom, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― carsmilesteve, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
n. x
― Nick, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Andy, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Dan Perry, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― john yonderboy, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
As for me, I don't know... For the first song I would like "God Only Knows" by the Beach Boys, but I don't know how danceable that actually is.
For the last song, "This I promise you" by N'Sync.
No, not really -- but isn't that song expressly written and calculated to played at schmaltzy wedding ceremonies? N'Sync might be savvier than I originally thought, since those songs usually take years to go out of vogue; someone's mom is always requesting those Boltonesque numbers. Maybe that's why I have a hard time actually picking one, because visions of Celine Dion, et al. spring to mind when I think of wedding music.
― Nicole, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
And you're right, it's virtually impossible to dance to.
N.
― jel, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
I believe that song holds a special place in Tim Hopkins' heart too.
And now that I am trying to think of an alternate, the only things I can think of are really sleazy disco tunes. Maybe L'Trimm *is* the inevitable choice...
I can tell you what I *won't* be playing. "Celebration" by Kool and the Gang for a start.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
Err, I'm not a marrying type and I dislike love songs so I suppose I'm kind of screwed on this thread. Something cheezy by Madonna, how about?
― Ally, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Sterling Clover, Friday, 23 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― alex thomson, Saturday, 24 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― JM, Saturday, 24 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Ally, Saturday, 24 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
My sister chose a song called "Hold Tight" by an east coast (Canada) band called Modabo. Kinda sappy, but a perfect choice really.
― Kim, Saturday, 24 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
As for what song would be played at my wedding reception, I think the songs that would best match the mood would be any Cheap Trick song. Some great songs that were upbeat and that had an amazing rock and roll backbeat.
― Luptune Pitman, Sunday, 25 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Sterling Clover, Monday, 26 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
I suspect "What Another Man Spills" was played in its entirety, and perhaps "Slow Graffiti" too (a pre-release wedding gift from a Jeepsterine). I recall sticking "Cupid & Psyche 85" on in the bedroom, which is maybe why everyone remained sardine-like in the hall and lounge.
A certain Scottish guest treated us to "The Hawaiian Wedding Song" on acoustic guitar late in proceedings.
Stevie? Tim? Joe? Any musical memories of that night?
― Michael Jones, Monday, 26 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Sam Carter, Tuesday, 27 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
The 'Slow Graffiti' 45 was certainly played. I remember looking around the room and feeling strangely moved by the scene, all these people I largely didn't know. I don't admire the ep itself, mind. In fact I still don't really know how most of the A-side goes.
Lots of things I didn't recognize. Stereolab. Doris Day.
Nobody played 'Reading, Writing & Arithmetic'. That much I do remember.
― the pinefox, Wednesday, 28 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
Failing that, my oozing Canadian heart would probably go with "Bobcaygeon" from The Tragically Hip's "Phantom Power" record, and exit hopefully when Granny had been carted off to bed with "The Light" by Common.
For those of you with more wedding experience than me, I always wanted to have a set of jazz in there alongside the rock band or DJ or whatever, but wondered would people be into it, or would they probably get bored and leave?
― Dave M., Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
― Mark Richardson, Saturday, 3 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)
"Each language only helps me tell you how grand you are ..."
― Alicia, Thursday, 27 March 2003 01:21 (twenty-two years ago)
― RJG (RJG), Thursday, 27 March 2003 01:26 (twenty-two years ago)
― Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 27 March 2003 01:29 (twenty-two years ago)
― girl scout heroin (iamamonkey), Thursday, 27 March 2003 01:44 (twenty-two years ago)
― Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 27 March 2003 01:49 (twenty-two years ago)
― electric sound of jim (electricsound), Thursday, 27 March 2003 01:51 (twenty-two years ago)
― ken, Thursday, 27 March 2003 18:56 (twenty-two years ago)
― Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 27 March 2003 19:02 (twenty-two years ago)
― oops (Oops), Thursday, 27 March 2003 19:10 (twenty-two years ago)
― Nick A. (Nick A.), Thursday, 27 March 2003 19:12 (twenty-two years ago)
― christoff (christoff), Thursday, 27 March 2003 19:20 (twenty-two years ago)
We used this as our "walking down the aisle together" song - only as an instrumental (played live by a fellow band member who worked it out on electric guitar). After the "ladies and gentlemen, may we present Mr. & Mrs..." the Beach Boys' version kicked in. We didn't do a first dance or anything like that, but the first song on for us was Spiritualized's "Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space" (the full "Elvis ending" version)
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 28 July 2008 01:21 (sixteen years ago)
love love love this ^
I always thought Nick Cave's "Into My Arms" would be nice for a wedding. not necessarily the reception, but some part of the actual ceremony.
― stephen, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 02:56 (sixteen years ago)
"Two worlds collide, rival nations It's a primitive clash, venting years of frustrations Bravely we hope against all hope, there is so much at stake Seems our freedom's up against the ropes Does the crowd understand? Is it a East vs. West, or man against man Can any nation stand alone?"
― Euler, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:03 (sixteen years ago)
Too Drunk to Fuck by the Dead Kennedys.
― Popture, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:17 (sixteen years ago)
i am gonna try and get me and wifey to slow dance with me to "you're a fish and i'm a water sign"
― m bison, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:19 (sixteen years ago)
just wondering, u Australian, Popture?
― wilter, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:23 (sixteen years ago)
Also everyone I know who has been recently (last few years) married has played God Only Knows at their wedding.
― wilter, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:29 (sixteen years ago)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v617/WidowOfDestiny/Jiggle_Panda.gif
― wilter, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:30 (sixteen years ago)
Teddy Pendergrass - "When somebody loves you back"
Easy.
― Jacobw, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:38 (sixteen years ago)
Hey, my wife really did walk down the aisle to "Welcome". We weren't married when I posted that. First dance was to something by Veloso.
― Mark Rich@rdson, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:52 (sixteen years ago)
My bff did Al Green's "Let's Stay Together" and man it was so perfect I might actually have to steal it for when/if mine happens.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:55 (sixteen years ago)
Our was "Halo" by The Cure.
― Size-zero-brigade-embrace-token-chubby-chops (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 16:23 (fifteen years ago)
blimey, lateish-period b-side! 'friday i'm in love' too... garish?
maybe i'm overthinking this, but i don't want people to think "oh god, don't they know this song is about heartbreak/death/other inappropriate thing?" or "wtf is this dreary shit?" or "i'm not dancing to this, they can rot out there...".
― Background Zombie (CharlieNo4), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 16:46 (fifteen years ago)
I don't know, the song meant a lot to both of us and despite it being cheesy the lyrics worked well. We ended up getting a lot of comments later in the evening from the older relatives about "that pretty song you danced too", so I'm guessing it went over well.
When my wife and I were talking about this, we decided... you know, forget everyone else. This is OUR song to start our married life, who cares what everyone else wants.
― Size-zero-brigade-embrace-token-chubby-chops (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 16:54 (fifteen years ago)
to me, it's better to lean toward popularism over hipness in wedding music. our first dance was "i only have eyes for you" which is an awesome song but also one that everybody knows, including parents and (probably) grandparents and random cousins who mainly listen to country music. if the wife is nervous, pick something slow and romantic and no one will care how your dancing is. they just want to be happy for you.
― congratulations (n/a), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 16:55 (fifteen years ago)
ha that was actually an xpost, not a response to jon's post, even though it reads like one.
I'm getting married, but not for two years yet so I have a lot of time to think about this. Thinking about maybe using Modest Mouse's Sleepwalking (I think it's an old blues song, with lyrics added?) to walk down the aisle. Fiancee isn't too impressed, no one ever is when I mention Modest Mouse but it's a beautiful little song.
Is A Case of You too cynical for a first dance? 'Twas the first song he ever played to me on the guitar and one that got me into Joni Mitchell, who I love now. Sets us up to make everyone try to dance to Raised on Robbery later in the night, too. ;)
Maybe the Shangri-La's Sophisticated Boom Boom for the aisle walk. "I was walking down the street, and it was getting mighty late.."
― she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:02 (fifteen years ago)
We just used Palace Bros.' "New Partner" for our first dance. Then the Supremes "You Keep Me Hanging On" to really start the dancing. It went over well. Oh, and we followed that up with "Push It."
― wmlynch, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:13 (fifteen years ago)
Ours was "Born Slippy". My advice would be "do not choose 'Born Slippy'".
― fun is for people who can't cope with life (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:13 (fifteen years ago)
to me, it's better to lean toward popularism over hipness in wedding music.
right. and to exactly that end, i've just remembered i've also been considering the beatles' 'all you need is love'!
easy to dance/sway to, everyone knows the words and will bawl the chorus/ba-ba-bas, people will actively want to dance to it (i think), perfect sentiment obv, and, well, it's the beatles.
this is also in the ballpark:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rW_PBQcrKH8
xpost lol @ noodle vague! 'smack my bitch up' more appropriate?
― Background Zombie (CharlieNo4), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:16 (fifteen years ago)
If you had gone with "Halo" by Depeche that would have been...amusing.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:18 (fifteen years ago)
I have done plenty of heinous things in my life but I am glad to say that smacking my bitch up isn't one of them.
Anyway, yeah, populist over personalist, imo.
― fun is for people who can't cope with life (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:20 (fifteen years ago)
what? it's the first dance! your song! only you dancing! choose whatever obscurity you want! save the populism for the rest of the reception.
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:24 (fifteen years ago)
Who cares about "popularism" though? It's only the two of you dancing, you don't need to make sure Grandma and Grandpa can dance to it. Obviously you probably don't want to alienate people with something uber-obscure or whatever, but I don't think the "popularism" is that important for your first dance. I think the meaningfulness to you as a couple takes precedence.
― Size-zero-brigade-embrace-token-chubby-chops (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:25 (fifteen years ago)
Haha lex.
I dunno, I just think of a wedding as a public, social event, even the first dance. I wd rather go with something classic almost to the point of being neutral rather than crate-digging. Realise this probly makes me history's greatest monster or something.
― fun is for people who can't cope with life (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:29 (fifteen years ago)
Mrs A and I had a lengthy and largely fruitless discussion period about this before our wedding two years ago - she's much less into music than me and we wanted something that was romantic, not too cheesy and most importantly *short*. It also had to cater for my two left feet. Finally went with "This Will Be Our Year" by The Zombies and revolved slowly whilst clinging onto each other for the full 2 1/2 minutes.
Once the First Dance is out of the way then of course everyone just has fun and any embarrassment over our turn was quickly dispelled by one of my best friends attempting to drunkenly breakdance to Vanilla Ice in front of a bemused crowd of aged relatives.
― Bill A, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:31 (fifteen years ago)
Nah, I can understand. But thats what the rest of the reception is for, the people to dance and have fun. That first dance though? Time to be selfish.
― Size-zero-brigade-embrace-token-chubby-chops (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:31 (fifteen years ago)
I got married 10 days ago. The music discussions were awful, because we have pretty different taste. We settled on The Song for the first dance about 20 times, and kept changing our minds. I wanted something that wasn't too emotional, because I am a cryer. We ended up dancing to Sinatra - You Make Me Feel So Young. It was MUCH too long but other than that okay. The dancing thing was a source of anxiety for us both so we did the first dance before dinner so we could relax while we ate.
― franny glass, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:35 (fifteen years ago)
congratulations!
― plax (I know, right?), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:36 (fifteen years ago)
jon otm
― --nicci mane (some dude), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:37 (fifteen years ago)
Oh cheers.
xpost
― franny glass, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:46 (fifteen years ago)
Sigh. One of those big momentous song choices that I will never ever get to make coz I'm never getting married.
I was coming in here to say that I wouldn't marry any lad that wouldn't let our first song be Be My Baby (or Just Like Honey or a mashup of both, somehow) - but then saw that was the first choice in the first post. Perhaps I'll just marry N. so that I can get a nice big wedding party with Be My Baby as the first dance (and a persian carpet from Liberty from my family) and then politely go home with a handshake once the fun party has been had. I get to keep the gifts, tho.
Chuck: serious answer. It's your wedding, it's your first dance, pick what you want to dance to. Your "our song" is fucking fabulous, I'd go with that.
― girls just wanna have mixtapes (Masonic Boom), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 17:47 (fifteen years ago)
yeah "nothing can stop us" seems a fine choice, especially if it's your "our song"
i intend to hire a hip-hop choreographer prior to my wedding and get some fucking banging moves in there - there will be no awkward shuffling in my first dance! can't wait m8
(went to a wedding @ the wkend which made me feel v happy about being in the age of weddings for the first time - bride & groom had choreographed some steps to otis redding, they were A+)
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:11 (fifteen years ago)
I requested Queen's "Don't stop Me Now" at my sister's wedding reception. It was a great choice
― CaptainLorax, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:26 (fifteen years ago)
me and my wife danced to "This Will Be Our Year" by the zombies
― scared of gaucho (M@tt He1ges0n), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:29 (fifteen years ago)
I have a friend who's requested "Closer" by NIN at the last three weddings she & I have been to. Might see if I can get the DJ to spin their version of "Get Down, Make Love" at the end of my wedding night, once parents-in-law have gone home (my own family wouldn't care.)
― she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:30 (fifteen years ago)
We should start thinking about this. We have till April. It's not going to be anywhere near a traditional reception though, so the pressure's off a little.
― Sickamous (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:47 (fifteen years ago)
Masonic Boom, I've been reading your posts of late and I just want to offer you a nice digital hug.
And I listened to your Myspace page and your music is ace!
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:51 (fifteen years ago)
i want my wedding to be exactly like the one from rachel getting married except I probably will never get married u no
― plax (I know, right?), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:55 (fifteen years ago)
i want to marry rachel from rachel getting married
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 18:56 (fifteen years ago)
We went with Fire In My Heart by Super Furry Animals which went down quite well
― groovypanda, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 19:02 (fifteen years ago)
i always think Baby I Love You by the Ramones would be a really good one.
― plax (I know, right?), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 19:03 (fifteen years ago)
I was running around the park the other day and the song "In Love With You" by Fred Falke & Alan Braxe came on---if I could cut it down by like 3 min I think it would work great.
― b0dylanguage, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 19:45 (fifteen years ago)
FoF went to a wedding recently where the first dance was in fact two songs, both by The Wonderstuff: 'It's Yer Money I'm After, Baby' and 'Unbearable' (chorus: "I didn't like you very much when I met you/And now I like you even less'") - they bounced around in full-on posho wedding gear and everyone apparently thought it was hilarious...
But. I'm not sure I want people to think our first dance is *funny*, and I suspect neither of us is confident enough to make such obvious and deliberate fools of ourselves!
Ak. Also, my family are kinda used to Richard Curtis weddings and this is def going to be a whole lot more Mike Leigh...
Good to read much Saint Etienne love anyway, although thoroughly unsurprising round these parts :-)
― Background Zombie (CharlieNo4), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 22:56 (fifteen years ago)
me and my wife danced to "This Will Be Our Year" by the zombiesweird, was just talking to a friend at work today who wants this to be her wedding song. good choice!
― tylerw, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 22:58 (fifteen years ago)
did you dance to the recording, or was someone playing it?
― tylerw, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 22:59 (fifteen years ago)
i intend to hire a hip-hop choreographer prior to my wedding and get some fucking banging moves in there - there will be no awkward shuffling in my first dance!
^^^yes. but instead of hip-hop, it'd be nice to do a super-formal eighteenth century waltz to a john fahey piece or something.
― Unisom beeitchs. (Matt P), Wednesday, 16 September 2009 23:08 (fifteen years ago)
the flamingos - "i only have eyes for you"
― Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 17 September 2009 03:09 (fifteen years ago)
In a jokey sense, I was listening to Notorious B.I.G. feat R Kelly - "I'm F@xking You Tonight" and thought that it would be a very amusing start. With the lyrics reminiscing on the early days of the couple's lovemaking (and the involvement of her sister!) coupled with R Kelly continuously crooning the line "and I'm f@!king you tonight.." Fairly childish but amused me nonetheless.
― mmmm, Thursday, 17 September 2009 06:20 (fifteen years ago)
we got married a couple of weeks ago... for the ceremony itself we used mogwai's 'helicon 1, yma sumac's 'babalu' and eyvind kang's 'marriage of days'.
didn't do the first dance thing as such. I wanted to choreograph some salsa moves to something really inappropriate, but my wife was not comfortable with everyone watching her dance. to be fair, it's awkward enough being the centre of attention anyway. ah well. maybe next time. however, the first tune we ended up on the together on the floor to was secret chiefs 3's 'horsemen of the invisible'.
we had no DJ...I programmed the playlist and it seemed to keep people going. everything from britney, shakira and dizzee through del shannon and sam'n'dave to black flag and QOTSA.
the final run of drunken crowd-pleasers was incredibly uplifting and communal, if pretty obvious: 'I want you back', 'crazy horses', 'superstition', 'hey ya', 'my sharona', '500 miles', 'wuthering heights', 'don't stop believing'.
it was beautiful, man.
*sniff*
― m the g, Thursday, 17 September 2009 07:35 (fifteen years ago)
I'm surprised at how many of these first dance/general wedding floor-filler tunes/artists I've never heard of!
Yma Sumac? Eyvind Kang? Secret Chiefs 3? The Flamingos? 'You Make Me Feel so Young'? 'New Partner@? 'Sleepwalking'? 'Sophisticated Boom Boom'?
Not a clue, bub. I feel so lame, worrying about whether to choose The Beatles or Nina bloody Simone in the face of such richness...
I've not even (knowingly) heard 'This Will Be Our Year', although I now realise it's on Odessey and Oracle, which I bought on eMusic a couple of weeks ago so I guess I now own it!
― Background Zombie (CharlieNo4), Thursday, 17 September 2009 09:43 (fifteen years ago)
[NB Spotify is helping me out re: all the above bands/songs so no need to explain!]
― Background Zombie (CharlieNo4), Thursday, 17 September 2009 09:47 (fifteen years ago)
SC3 was our first dance, but not The First Dance, to be fair. it was quite late in the evening by the time it came on and we hit the floor.
the ceremony music wasn't that well known, I guess, but rather than have the usual tasteful (but equally anonymous) classical stuff, we wanted some sounds that were meaningful to us. it wasn't exactly a traditional wedding anyway...
it is mighty difficult trying to make a playlist that will suit toddlers, grannies, wire readers, old punks, ravers and children of the '80s alike.
― m the g, Thursday, 17 September 2009 11:20 (fifteen years ago)
― tylerw, Wednesday, September 16, 2009 5:58 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
ha my sister and her boyfriend (now husband) played this song at our wedding
― congratulations (n/a), Thursday, 17 September 2009 11:56 (fifteen years ago)
it's all about whitehouse - 'my cock's on fire'
― dogs, Thursday, 17 September 2009 12:11 (fifteen years ago)
"underneath it all" by no doubt
― Tracer Hand, Thursday, 17 September 2009 12:14 (fifteen years ago)
trying to make a playlist that will suit toddlers, grannies, wire readers, old punks, ravers and children of the '80s alike.
this is basically exactly what i have to do for the pre-"disco" playlist. am i going to try? nope! i'm going to fill it with songs we want to hear because this isn't dancing time...
― Background Zombie (CharlieNo4), Thursday, 17 September 2009 15:22 (fifteen years ago)
I had to do that too. the pre-disco "dinner" playlist was six hours of martin denny, les baxter, art blakey, mingus, brubeck, tinariwen and iranian classical stuff.
― m the g, Thursday, 17 September 2009 15:28 (fifteen years ago)
Southall to thread!
― alien vs the smiths (country matters), Thursday, 17 September 2009 15:29 (fifteen years ago)
idk if 'world at your feet' is for everyone :/
― history mayne, Thursday, 17 September 2009 15:37 (fifteen years ago)