Music meme: day 14 of 30
Jul. 21st, 2017 01:24 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Here we go, the middle of the list hits
As you probably know, I'm already married, and I had my wedding five years ago. We had a ceilidh the evening before instead of a disco the evening after, played by The Big Round Band, but I think I never actually had a set-list. I remember there was a very cool song with bouncing and hugs with a title that was apt for the last day of singlehood, but that's not much help in identifying it!
Because the date of our legal wedding and therefore our anniversary is 29th February, we have a bit of a connection to the operetta Pirates of Penzance where leap day is a plot point. The amazing
deborah_c played the overture for us as entry music (and went way above and beyond to make sure we had music at our wedding at all, when we and the venue were pretty clueless about sound tech). The relevant bit is not one of the really famous songs from the show, but it seemed more sensible to have the overture with recognizable motifs than just the paradox song:
pseudomonas chose: How great delight by Thomas Tomkins, which is about the singer wishing they could kiss and talk at the same time:
siderea sourced for us: Tant con je vivrai by Adam de la Halle.
The words are:
We also really wanted to have something for communal singing but not religious. And English people are basically quite bad at having songs that large groups of people know well enough to sing, so we settled on the imperfect compromise of the XKCD version of Boom-de-yada.
I have no intention of having any more weddings to choose music for. I'm already married, as are all my partners. And maybe poly people aren't supposed to say this, but I really think I've found my people and hope not to end or change my current relationships. Friends who have looked into these things in more detail think it's not actually illegal to have weddings, in the sense of ceremonies indicating lifelong romantic commitment, to more than one partner, as long as you don't try to register the relationship as a marriage for legal purposes. But I am not really sure of the details and anyway at the moment we don't have any desire to be married to more people than our existing spouses, even if it is (or became) legally ok.
It is fair to say that I never intended to get married the first time either, so maybe I'm wrong. I suppose we've vaguely talked about the possibility that those of us who are EU citizens may need to marry those who are not for immigration reasons and safety, but I really really really hope it doesn't come to that and if we were in that situation there wouldn't be any singing and dancing, just whatever paperwork we needed for survival. And hypothetically my current relationships might come to an end and then I might find a new person who really wanted to get married to me. But then the song I would choose would depend so much on the person and the circumstances that I can't really speculate what it would be, and I don't really want to because it involves imagining the ends of relationships I really want to keep.
I'm not in general a fan of the wedding tradition of the First Dance to a romantic song. Partly because I'm not much of a dancer, and partly because I think there are better ways to do symbolic consummation. And then finding a song which is lyrically appropriate is surprisingly hard; a lot of songs in the style that's appropriate to slow-dance to are really breakup songs, or at best they're hugely monogamy-assuming and heteronormative. As
elf pointed out in this meme, a lot of poly-friendly songs are about casual
I think it was
ghoti_mhic_uait who pointed out that the most inappropriate possible song for a wedding is She moves through the fair, since it mentions
I never daydreamed about my ideal wedding when I was single, so I never had a concept in my mind of what song I
A song that you would love played at your wedding.
As you probably know, I'm already married, and I had my wedding five years ago. We had a ceilidh the evening before instead of a disco the evening after, played by The Big Round Band, but I think I never actually had a set-list. I remember there was a very cool song with bouncing and hugs with a title that was apt for the last day of singlehood, but that's not much help in identifying it!
Because the date of our legal wedding and therefore our anniversary is 29th February, we have a bit of a connection to the operetta Pirates of Penzance where leap day is a plot point. The amazing
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Though counting in the usual way,One of my favourite memories of the ceremony is my three best friends from college singing two songs for us in lovely three-part harmony. One of them
Years twenty-one I've been alive,
Yet, reck'ning by my natal day,
Yet, reck'ning by my natal day,
I am a little boy of five!
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Love, since thou canst do wonders, heap my blissesAnd the song I most associate with getting married is the incredibly romantic one that
And grant her kissing words, or speaking kisses.
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The words are:
Tant con je vivraiWhich is 13th century French and means something like,
N'amerai autrui que vous
Jà n'en partirai
Tant con je vivrai
Ains vous servirai
Loiaument mis m'i suis tous
Tant con je vivrai
N'amerai autrui que vous
For as long as I live / I will love no other but you / I will not leave you / For as long as I live / So I will serve you / Loyally [something I can't figure out] / For as long as I live / I will love no other but you. So it's a bit exclusive for a poly couple, but it's so pretty and romantic that I don't care.
We also really wanted to have something for communal singing but not religious. And English people are basically quite bad at having songs that large groups of people know well enough to sing, so we settled on the imperfect compromise of the XKCD version of Boom-de-yada.
I have no intention of having any more weddings to choose music for. I'm already married, as are all my partners. And maybe poly people aren't supposed to say this, but I really think I've found my people and hope not to end or change my current relationships. Friends who have looked into these things in more detail think it's not actually illegal to have weddings, in the sense of ceremonies indicating lifelong romantic commitment, to more than one partner, as long as you don't try to register the relationship as a marriage for legal purposes. But I am not really sure of the details and anyway at the moment we don't have any desire to be married to more people than our existing spouses, even if it is (or became) legally ok.
It is fair to say that I never intended to get married the first time either, so maybe I'm wrong. I suppose we've vaguely talked about the possibility that those of us who are EU citizens may need to marry those who are not for immigration reasons and safety, but I really really really hope it doesn't come to that and if we were in that situation there wouldn't be any singing and dancing, just whatever paperwork we needed for survival. And hypothetically my current relationships might come to an end and then I might find a new person who really wanted to get married to me. But then the song I would choose would depend so much on the person and the circumstances that I can't really speculate what it would be, and I don't really want to because it involves imagining the ends of relationships I really want to keep.
I'm not in general a fan of the wedding tradition of the First Dance to a romantic song. Partly because I'm not much of a dancer, and partly because I think there are better ways to do symbolic consummation. And then finding a song which is lyrically appropriate is surprisingly hard; a lot of songs in the style that's appropriate to slow-dance to are really breakup songs, or at best they're hugely monogamy-assuming and heteronormative. As
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
hey we're just doing this as long as we both like itrelationships, which is kind of wrong for a wedding.
I think it was
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
our wedding daybut primarily as a euphemism for death. I am very fond of it, mind you. And I have attended a wedding where the big romantic moment Song was Hey, that's no way to say goodbye by Leonard Cohen, which is a gorgeous song but way depressing if you go past the opening lines:
I loved you in the morning, our kisses deep and warm,
Your hair upon the pillow like a sleepy golden storm,
Yes, many loved before us, I know that we are not new,
In city and in forest they smiled like me and you
I never daydreamed about my ideal wedding when I was single, so I never had a concept in my mind of what song I
would love played. If I happened to be in a relationship where we had a song that was meaningful to us as a couple, then perhaps I'd choose that, but I can't help myself thinking about the detailed interpretation of the words. So, just out of interest, do any of you know any songs which are good for weddings, talking about serious relationships but not about possessiveness? Or songs that are good for non-religious communal singing?