Nursery Suite


The Nursery Suite is one of the last compositions by Edward Elgar. Like Elgar's The Wand of Youth suites, it makes use of sketches from the composer's childhood.
There are seven movements and a coda:

History

The composition of the Nursery Suite came about when Elgar mentioned in September 1930 to William Laundon Streeton of HMV that he had lately run across a box of musical sketches from the days of his youth. Streeton suggested that, as Master of the King's Musick, he might suitably draw on them for a work to mark the recent birth of Princess Margaret Rose. The suite was dedicated to Princess Margaret, her older sister Princess Elizabeth and their mother.
Most of the movements appear light, in the style of The Wand of Youth suites, and predominantly sunny in character. Some commentators have made an exception of "The Waggon ": the Elgar authority Michael Kennedy suggests that as the wagon rumbles towards us the music becomes sinister in a manner reminiscent of the bars in the Scherzo of the Second Symphony, when, in Elgar's words, "the wheels go over my head". Anthony Payne drew on the form of this movement for the ending of his elaboration of the Third Symphony sketches.
The Nursery Suite was one of the first pieces of orchestral music to receive its premiere in a recording studio rather than a concert hall. At its premiere on 23 May 1931, all but the two last movements were recorded under the baton of the composer. The last two movements were added when the whole suite was performed on 4 June 1931 before an invited audience including Princess Elizabeth, aged four, and her parents. The piece takes about 25 minutes to perform.
Reviewing the work when it first appeared, W.R. Anderson wrote in The Gramophone: "The last movement, with its striking violin cadenza, seems especially significant. It hints at memories, which even in music are best hinted at, not explicitly stated: not because they hurt, but because youth can only understand them so. … There is the old fire here, with at least two movements out of the other six showing a freshness distinct from that of the Wand of Youth … with the natural greatness of heart and spirit – something more than any genius can confer – that marks, and has marked through all his life, our beloved Edward Elgar."
The ballet "Nursery Suite", with Elgar's music, choreography by Ninette de Valois and scenery and costumes by Nancy Allen, was first performed by the Vic-Wells Ballet on 19 March 1932 at the Sadler's Wells Theatre. The cast included Anton Dolin, Alicia Markova and Joy Newton.
The choreographer Frederick Ashton used The Nursery Suite for a new ballet in 1986 for the Queen's sixtieth birthday gala at the Royal Opera House.

Instrumentation

It is scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in F, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, 2 percussionists and string section. Not all these instruments are played in all movements.