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Letting yourself influenced in everything your wedding planning means is not a wrong way. But in one part is may be a boring path, the same thing you have seen to others, the same program guests participate to. In other words nothing outside the box. It is not the case to give the alarm for a 360˚ change made, to push the limits but you can just start with overdone wedding songs.
Probably out of commodity, fear to make it all different when everybody goes in another direction the wedding songs are chosen according to the same common pattern. You know for sure that such songs are the best suitable but you kind of draw a limit. Overdone wedding songs are the ones unusually heard at weddings and not just this but the ones most frequently ones for key moments: starting with the grooms’ first dance and ending with the last dance at the reception.
Overdone Wedding Songs (Source: images.amazon.com)
What are your alternatives to such songs? No one can impose you specific, strict list of songs as it all varies according to each one’s music preferences. To any song considered overdone you can come up with country, R&B, classic music etc. in the measure in which the “replacements” will suit as style.
Overdone Wedding Songs (Source: weddingmusicunveiled.com)
In concrete examples given as to figure out better what you have to do the annoyingly overheard songs are “At last” by Etta James, “Can’t help falling in love” by Elvis Presley, “What a wonderful world” by Louis Armstrong, continuing with names such as Brad Paisley Rascal Flatts, Tim McGraw, these last more for the dance with the parents. What replacements can one find to these? Classic will never find its place in an obsolete category so never to fail this can be your source. Or, anything part of the modern music category can be your shot.