Jazz piano was the pop music of its era and a genre of music that brought people together to listen, dance, and celebrate. It's often considered a classy and sophisticated choice, especially for background music, drinks receptions and the wedding breakfast.

Given the piano's natural beauty and romantic soundscape, piano songs are a popular choice for the first dance song. The first dance usually precedes the wedding party when all your guests will join you on the dance floor. The piano has been used in love songs and ballads for the last century, so options for the first dance are endless. Piano versions can often easily be arranged to create an original spin on a modern classic. Choose a popular wedding song that means something to you.


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Once these wrap up, your guests will be invited to join you on the dance floor. It is important to work with your wedding DJ and let them know if you have any must play, try to play and do not play songs. While it may be tempting to try to plan out every song for the night, it is highly advised to let the pros do their thing. A professional DJ is skilled at reading the crowd, selecting the best song to play next and keeping your party going. They will know how to correctly weave in and out of many different styles of music and, ultimately, keep the party going all night long.

For the couple: If the couple was involved in taking photos, this would be the time that photos are wrapped up with the wedding party. For this portion of the timeline, the couple stays in the background, preparing for the grand entrance and the rest of the ceremony.

This may be preceded by announcing the wedding party members, depending on the choices of the couple for their wedding. Some couples choose to make a more flashy entrance with a special dance or upbeat songs during the entrance. (Read: Our Favorite Grand Entrance Songs)

Some couples choose to include the guests after having just a minute or two of their first dance solo. This gives the chance to get some energy going among all of the guests and the wedding party before everyone sits down to dinner.

What it is: This is a great opportunity for the couple to say anything they may want to say to the whole of the attendees, including thank yous for attending, thank yous to the wedding party, or even thank yous to one another.

How long it lasts: Typically lasting for ten minutes, wedding party toasts may run longer if there are surprise toasts or if a lot of emotion is involved. This time is encouraged to be broken up over the course of the dinner.

What it is: More and more couples are choosing to forgo or postpone their honeymoon and will move on to an afterparty after the main wedding reception has completed. This may be at a private residence, at the same venue, or at a bar or restaurant.

For a longer reception, there are many places to add minutes to your wedding reception timeline. Allow guests a longer cocktail hour while the wedding party is taking photos, for example, or open up the floor for dancing for a longer time. Many couples will add fun things for their guests to do that may add to sentimental memories of the special night.

Songs are essential for every stage of your wedding and the new trend is featuring instrumental wedding songs. The stages range from prelude to processional, ceremony to recessional, and reception. The music that serenades the guests, accompanies the bride, groom, or wedding party can make lasting memories.

She recommends keeping an eye out for errant hairs, backward necklaces, crooked ties, falling boutonnieres, off-kilter bouquets, and those pesky black hair ties so many women wear on their wrists. Most imperfections will go unnoticed in the final photo, but the wedding party will appreciate your effort!

Instead of posing all the dress-wearers on one side and all the suit-wearers on the other, mix and match your wedding party people for a more interesting look. Be sure to ask if there are any couples among the crew so you can pose partners together.

Do you accept the challenge of organising the wedding of your dreams? If you have a limited budget or if you like organising your own wedding party, organising your wedding yourself is definitely an option. Follow the steps below!

Organising a wedding party takes a lot of time, so ask yourself if you can clear your schedule. If you opt for a carefree organisation, you should outsource the organisation to a professional wedding planner. A wedding planner can take a lot of work off your hands, but requires a little more budget.

There is nothing quite as romantic as a band playing in the background at a garden party. During the evening party, you may choose a wedding party DJ that will start the evening with your opening dance or a cover band.

Preparing a budget for your wedding party is an ongoing process. You systematically adjust the provisional budget when you receive offers or when you can make a more targeted estimate. This event budget checklist will also help you organise a wedding.

Best not to make promises that one cannot keep. 


In lieu of any vow renewals, my husband and I keep score of our various shortcomings and indiscretions. For every mutually acknowledged misdeed, the other party gets to partake in one of their own to even or settle the score.


Certain vices and oversights (i.e. gambling, adultery, compulsive spending) are identified as such and remunerated by mutual endeavors and related activities.


It's far cheaper than paying a divorce lawyer because we get to spend the money on ourselves rather than attorney retainers and padded billable hours.

Your search returned 89 broadsidesDisplaying broadsides 31 to 60 of 89: Clean Hearthstane

Verse 1: 'Some people say its jolly a single life to lead, / They only talk for talking's sake and so I never heed; / A single life is very well, it may be gay and free, / But the comforts of a married life are suited best for me.' Below the title we are told that 'Copies of this popular song, can always be had at the Poet's Box, Ovegate, Dundee'. Clerk of the Pipe, Or, The Leith Reform Garland

Verse 1 begins: 'The Clerk of the Pipe is a man of some weight. / And nothing will serve him but serving the state'. This song is labelled up as new and should be sung to the tune 'Down Derry Down'. Two woodcuts have been included, one of two gents drinking in a cellar and the other of a man in eastern garb, smoking a pipe. Cloak's Knavery

This ballad begins: 'Come buy my New Ballad, / I have't in my wallet, / Tho twill not, I fear, please every Palate: / Then mark what ensu'th . . . ' This broadside is especially interesting and rare, since it also contains the musical score for the ballad. At the very bottom of the sheet, a short note states that the broadside was printed by Mr William Adam in May 1719, while the accompanying letters 'Edr' suggest that it was probably published in Edinburgh. Coal Jock

This ballad begins: 'Whaur the mischief am I noo? / Freens, excuse me, for I'm fu', / Fairly stappit tae the muzzle - choker block; / I've been oot an' hae'n a drap. . . ' Below the title we are told that 'Copies of this can be had at the Pox Box, Overgat, Dundee'. 'Freens' means 'friends', 'stappit' is 'full', 'muzzle' means 'face' and 'choker block' means 'chock-a'block'. Coalier Lassie

Verse 1: 'The Coalier had a Daughter, / And she is wondrous bonny; / But if you had once brought her / To a true sense of Joy, / Although she struggle for a while / yet you'll won about her, / If once her Heart you can beguile / you'll never go without her.' Coblers' Tears!

This memorial notice begins: 'AN ELEGY, / On the much Lamented Death of JOCK HIEGH, who departed to Other Climes, October 20th, 1816, after being Thirty-Six Years / Hangman of Edinburgh.' The elegy begins: 'Ye doggerel bards, quick tune your harps'. Cockabendie Loves Not Me

This ballad begins: 'What care I for Cockabendie, / Cockabendie loves not me.' The text preceeding this ballad reads: 'A NEW SONG / Much in Request. / Sung with its proper Tune.' A stylised border has been included along the top of the sheet to make it more attractive. Cockles and Mussels. Aliv, O

Verse 1 and chorus: 'In Dublin's fair city lived a maiden so pritty, / Her name it was Molly Malone, / And though streets broad and narrow she wheeled her wheelbarrow, / Crying Cockles and mussels! alive, alive, O / Alive, alive O! alive, alive, O! / Crying Cockles and! alive, alive, O!' This ballad was published by the Poet's Box, Dundee. Cocky-Bendie's Wedding O

Verse 1: 'In Airdrie town in fifty nine, / The evening being calm and fine; / Both rich and poor they did combine / To hold Cocky-Bendie's wedding O. / In Finnias lane they did agree, / That night to hold the wedding spree; / Then to Coatbrig they march'd wi' glee / To celebrate the marriage O. / Durum doo a doo &c.' This ballad was published by the Poet's Box, which advertises 'NEW SONGS OUT EVERY WEEK'. The town of origin is not specified. Come Down and Open the Door, Love

Verse 1: 'I've been to a party, I've been to a ball, / I've been where there's you can see; / I've been where there's swells, and such pretty girls, / And I've had a jolly good spree. / I've just staggered home, but I've lost my key, / My wife she won't open the door, / I've knocked and I've bawled, at the window threw stones / For over two hours I'm sure.' The ballad was published by the Poet's Box, 182 Overgate, Dundee. Come Sit Thee Down

This ballad begins: 'Come sit thee down, my bonny bonny love, / Come sit thee down by me, love, / And I will tell thee many a tale of the dangers of the sea. / Of the perils of the deep, love'. Published in 1855 by the Poet's Box of Glasgow, this ballad is to be sung to the tune of 'Something or Nothing' and cost a penny. Come Sweet Lass and Sweet is the Lass that loves me

The first ballad begins: 'COME Sweet Lass, / it?s bonny Weather lets together / Come sweet Lass, / let's trip it on the Grass: / Every where, / poor Jockie seeks his Dear, / Unless that she appear, / he sees no Beauty there.'The text preceeding it reads: 'OR Loves invitation / To a new Tune.' Come Under my Plaidie

This ballad begins: 'Come under my plaidie, the nicht's gaun to fa' ' / Come in frae the cauld blast, the drift and the snaw ; / Come under my plaidie, and sit down beside me, / There's room in't, dear lassie, believe me, for twa!'. To be sung to the tune of Johnnie M'Gill. Comic Divan' and Lord Ullin's Daughter

The first ballad begins: 'Gentlemen Visitors, how do you do? / Pop into my comic museum, / Of things rare and curious, I've got not a few / Come in and you shall quickly see 'em.' A note below the woodcut illustration states that the first ballad should be sung to the tune, 'Let the Toast Pass'. Comic Song, Patricks Day

Verse 1 begins: 'From Munster I came and I went into Leinster, / I met with a maid and they called her a spinster'. This sheet was published by James Lindsay of 9 King Street, Glasgow. There is a woodcut above the title which depicts three deer crossing a rocky, tree-lined stream. Comical Wedding

This report begins: 'The inhabitants of this town were highly delighted and amused on the night of Tuesday last, by a Wedding of rather a singular and uncommon description which took place here on that day, and afforded no little sport to the young and old of both sexes, who had assembled in great numbers to meet the wedding party returning from the house of the Rev. Mr ____'. The broadside was published by Sanderson of the High Street in Edinburgh. Complaints of the 'Beaux and the Bads'

This broadside begins: 'THE Grievious Complaint of the Beaux and the Bads, And a the young Widows, and Lasses and Lads, For Death's taking Mas: James Crouckshanks awa, Who buckl'd the Beggers at Mountounha. / Interr'd in the Church-yeard of Inverask, the 29. of March 1724.' There are no publication details included on this sheet. Condemned or, The Last Moments of William Perrie

This execution ballad begins: 'The morning came, the hours flew past:- / Yea, the fatal hour, poor Perrie's last, / Drew near, on which he was to die, / And meet his God, his Judge on high.' Perrie was 'Executed at Paisley, October 18th, 1837'. Under the title a small quotation has been provided: '"He died, as erring man should die, / Without display, without parade."' This broadside was printed by Caldwell and Sons. Confession of James Bryce

This ballad begins: 'I am a poor unhappy man, James Bryce it is my name, / I murdered my brother-in-law, I may tell it all with shame'. Above the title a woodcut illustration of an isolated house in the forest, next to a river, has been included. Confession of James Wilson

This broadside begins: 'CONFESSION / Of JAMES WILSON, who was Hanged at Glasgow on Wednesday last, 4th June, 1823, giving an account of upwards of 30 different Robberies committed by him in Glasgow, Paisley, Greenock, and other parts of the country; the whole communicated by Wilson to one of the Ministers of this City, a few days before his Execution.' This account has been taken from the 'Glasgow Chronicle' and was printed as a broadside by John Muir of Glasgow. Confession of Murder

This account begins: 'A Full and Particular Account of the Apprehension of THOMAS MOFFAT, who fled from Kilsyth about three years ago, for the Barbarous Murder of his own Father, by repeated Stabs in the abdomen! With an Account of his Confession and also of the manner in which he spent his life since, &c.' This broadside was printed in Edinburgh for James McLean and priced at one penny. Confession of Robert Emond

This broadside begins: 'Confession of EMOND / In the Jail, on the day after he received sentence of death.' The confession has been sourced from a newspaper entitled the 'North Briton'. Confession of Robert Irvine

This report begins: 'THE LAST / CONFESSION / Of Mr. Robert Irvine, who was Execute May 1st, 1717. Near Brughtoun between Leith and Edinburgh, for Murdering John and Alexander Gordons, Sons to James Gordon of Allan, on Sunday the 28th of April 1717.' Confession of William Anderson Horner

This broadside begins: 'An Account of the Life and Dying Confession of William Anderson Horner, Son to Peter Anderson Horner, Living in the Parish of Saline in the Shire of Perth, who murdered Elison Mitchell, Wife of David Blythe Horner also, in the beginning of Winter, 1708. in the manner following.' Confessions made by William Burke

This crime report begins: 'CONFESSIONS MADE BY William Burke. Now under Sentence of Death, in the Calton Jail, for the Horrid Murder of Mrs Campbell, frankly detailing several other atrocious Murders, in which he was concerned along with Hare . . . Extracted from the Caledonian Mercury, 5th January, 1829.' The broadside also contains a poem describing Burke's 'Confessions, Lamentations, and Reflections'. The sheet was priced at one penny. Confessions of John Stewart

This crime report begins: 'An account of the different murders to which John Stewart and his female associate has made confession to since their condemnation, making eleven in all, with the names of the places where some of them were committed with the manner they took to Murder their victims, and then rob them.' The sheet was published by Carmichael and Graham of the Trongate in Glasgow, and the story was sourced from the Edinburgh Scotsman and Caledonian Mercury newspapers. Confessions, Lamentations, & Reflections of William Burke

Following on from the title, the introductory text continues: 'late of Portsburgh, who is to be Executed at Edinburgh, on the 28th January, 1829, for Murder, and his body given for Public Dissection.' The ballad itself begins: 'Good people all, both great and small, / I pray you lend an ear, / Unto these lines That I have penn'd, / Which quickly you shall hear.' Although there are no publication details included on this sheet, the subject matter suggests that it was almost certainly published in Edinburgh, in January 1829. Congratulation

This public notice continues: 'For His Sacred Majesty, CHARLES, the third Monarch of Great Britain, His happy Arrival at WHITEHALL. / By a Loyal Member of His Majesties Army. / Edinburgh, June 13. 1660.' Congratulatory Poem

This poem begins: 'IN Autumn when Seges decores the Fields, / And Phoebus all plentiful Desierds yeelds. / These Creatures who did formerly bewail / Their hard Estate, sing now in Annandale'. The wedding between Charles, 1st Earl of Hopetoun, and Henrietta, daughter to the Rt Hon. Earl of Annandale, took place on 31st August, 1699. Conoughtman's Description of Glasgow

Verse 1: 'I travelled the whole way from Dounoughadee, / The flourishing city of Glasgow to see ; / When I came there the first meat I saw, / Was boil'd roasted herring at the Broomielaw.' No publication details have been included on this sheet.Results page: 1 2 3 ff782bc1db

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