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Work

2008
Duration:
11' 30"
Instrumentation:
flute (dbl. piccolo), 2 oboes, clarinet in Bb, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani, percussion (snare drum, 2 wood-blocks, tambourine, susp. cymbals, triangle, slap stick), strings
Contents:
in four movements:
Cauldron and stone
Floating on water
Spectral evidence
Ordeal of the cross

Samples

application/pdf,314k Score (314k) first two pages of each movement© M Louise Webster
audio/mpeg,703k Recording (703k) 0'00" - 1'00" Third Movement© M Louise Webster / St Matthew's Chamber Orchestra
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audio/mpeg,703k Recording (703k) 0'00" - 1'00" Second Movement© M Louise Webster / St Matthew's Chamber Orchestra
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audio/mpeg,702k Recording (702k) 0'00" - 1'00" Fourth Movement© M Louise Webster / St Matthew's Chamber Orchestra
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audio/mpeg,703k Recording (703k) 0'00" - 1'00" First Movement© M Louise Webster / St Matthew's Chamber Orchestra
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Availability

Programme Note

At the height of the witch-hunts in Europe between the years 1450 to 1700, it is believed that as many as 100,000 people were executed for witchcraft. Burning at the stake was a favoured form of execution. The interrogations and proofs of guilt or innocence were terrifying and bizarre, and included ‘trials by ordeal’ in which the innocent were expected to remove a stone from a cauldron of boiling water without being burned, float on water with a millstone around the neck, or stand with outstretched arms before a cross without tiring. ‘Spectral evidence’, or the appearance of the spirit of the accused in a witness’ dream or vision, was also admitted as evidence of witchcraft. Although prosecutions for witchcraft waned in number after the 17th century, groups of people have continued to be imprisoned, interrogated, tortured and executed on the basis of race, belief, or alleged wrong-doing. The burden of proof has relied on similarly circular and bizarre processes in detention centres in Stalinist Russia, Nazi Germany, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Guantanamo Bay, to name just a few.
These four short movements for orchestra are named after the proofs used in traditional witch-hunts, and remind us that similar injustices continue to this day.

Difficulty:
Advanced
Difficulty Note:
good community orchestra, professional orchestra
Influences:

Performance History

World Premiere for P: Proof Against Burning; St Matthew's Chamber Orch c. Joel; 140908 14 Sep 2008 Performed by the St. Matthew’s Chamber Orchestra conducted by Michael Joel, at St. Matthew-in-the-city, Auckland.
Michael Joel    St. Matthew's Chamber Orchestra

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