Adding an original element Antony John Ph. D. '02
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| Beyond
Wedding March: John, left, and OdomPhoto:
Chris Hildreth |
Antony John is not one for bridal registries. Rather than
supply a bride and groom with a gravy boat or place setting,
he prefers to put pencil to paper and write a wedding song
for the new couple.
After presenting several such gifts to friends, the thirty-two-year-old
John last year built a business around his compositions and
began accepting commissions for his work. His website, WeddingCompositions.com,
now draws interest nationwide and from as far away as New Zealand
and was featured in the June-July 2005 issue of Modern Bride
magazine. "There's a growing interest in commissioned
music as being one aspect of wedding planning that has not
been explored previously," he says.
Royal weddings in his native England traditionally provided
a chance for composers to show off new work, John says. But
most couples can't afford to hire a musical ensemble to play
at their wedding--let alone pay for an original composition--and
so a church organist playing Wagner's "Bridal Chorus" (better
known as "Here Comes the Bride") has become the staple
processional.
John says he can put together a one-minute wedding march for
a string quartet for about $300. Talking with brides to learn
their musical tastes--grooms are seldom interested in attending
to details of the wedding plan, he says--is the most involved
part of the process. After that, he usually scores the processional
within a couple of days. To make each composition as personal
as possible for a couple, he has incorporated into the final
works everything from classical pieces to Norwegian folksongs
that were hummed to him over the phone.
Daniel Sorin '96 says that the processional John composed for
his 2003 wedding included the opening bars of a Mozart clarinet
concerto that he is fond of and a snippet of the television
theme song to Xena: Warrior Princess, which his wife likes.
She was so thrilled with the end result that she convinced
John to form Wedding Compositions and now helps run the business. "Our
composition will never be played at another wedding, which
added a special element to our ceremony," says Sorin,
an assistant professor in the Pratt School of Engineering. "It
was nice that our friend was able to contribute to our wedding
through more than a typical gift."
John has been composing almost since he picked up his first
musical instrument--the piccolo--at age ten.
"I really wanted to know the nuts and bolts of music," he
says. "The academic side to it is a nice foil to the creativity
involved in a straight performance."
Although he says he is committed to "producing music that
has a social purpose," he doesn't want to be pegged solely
as a wedding composer. And so he also scores music for short
movies and teaches a film music history course at the Pacific
Northwest Film Scoring Program in Seattle, where he lives with
his wife, Audrey Odom '96, M.D./Ph.D. '03, a pediatric resident
at Children's Hospital & Regional Medical Center, and their
infant son.
Composing a processional for his own wedding in 2001 was probably
John's toughest assignment. "I knew very well what her
tastes were, and if I strayed even slightly from that, I knew
I would hear about it for a long time," he says with a
laugh.
--Matthew Burns
Burns is a freelance writer based in Raleigh.
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