The Severn Suite, Opus 87, is a musical work written by Sir Edward Elgar. It is a late composition, written in 1930, the result of an invitation to write a test piece for the National Brass Band Championship. It was dedicated to his friend, the author and critic George Bernard Shaw.
There are five movements, which follow each other without breaks:
The Severn of the title is the name of the river which runs through the centre of the city of Worcester where Elgar spent his childhood and lived later. The subtitles, added by Elgar when he made the orchestral arrangement, refer to historic places in the city: Worcester Castle, The Cathedral and the Commandery. One subtitle refers to the medieval Tournament.
A theme used in the opus may have been developed from an idea expressed in his cantata, Caractacus of 1897-8, a work devoted to the story of the British king defeated and captured by the armies of Rome in the 1st century AD. The work was commissioned by Herbert Whiteley of the National Brass Band Championship committee, who also assigned Henry Geehl, with his knowledge of brass band scoring, to assist with the orchestration. Geehl found Elgar difficult to work with as he had preconceived ideas many of which seemed to Geehl, with his great experience, to be ineffective. The final result was long believed to be Geehl's scoring - a compromise between Elgar's ideas and Geehl's experience. However, in 1995 the original manuscript, entirely in Elgar's hand and with a few pencilled suggestions, presumably the work of Geehl, resurfaced at auction, its emergence lays to rest any claim that the work was orchestrated by Geehl and not by Elgar. The manuscript was subsequently acquired by the Elgar Birthplace Museum, where it now resides.
The first performance was at the National Brass Band Championship at the Crystal Palace on 27 September 1930, which was won by the Foden's Motor Works Band. They then recorded excerpts from the work. It was published by R. Smith & Co. that year.