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When it comes about weddings traditions are a lot. To respect them or not is up to each one but the sure thing is that once you want to exclude certain ways of making the wedding program you have to come with replacements. And in so many cases the bride and groom like the way weddings are and they would not change it completely. Hence these two concepts can become one so you take a part from each side.
At a religious ceremony grooms are kind of limited and especially when it comes about the music. It is considered that the sacred place imposes a decency line which should not be crossed over. Well if rock music is excluded with no doubts at least you have a wide category of slow, love songs to propose as alternatives.
Country Wedding March Songs (source: mytagaytayhighlands.weebly.com)
Priests will hardly accept that in the church to be played modern music, something upbeat when the whole ceremony is of a solemn time. But at least for the bridal time things to be different, decisions more flexible and make her pleasure since it is her time, her moment of glory. Understanding the need and imposed guidelines about the music the bride will stay limited but what she gains is the avoided common, traditional category of the bridal march. Country wedding march songs sound like a good replacement and alternative. With a slow rhythm just like the bride needs when making her appearance and walking down the aisle this style music matches perfectly to the needs. It is just now the right decision to be made.
Country Wedding March Songs (source: ccwedblog.files.wordpress.com)
In concrete examples of what country wedding march songs one can select are “Look at you girl” by Chris LeDoux, expressing the exact situation of the bride being near the groom at the altar, or Rascal Flatts “Bless the broken road”.