Firing Anvil firing is the practice of firing an anvil into the air using
gunpowder. It has been popular in
California, the
eastern United States and the
southern United States, much like how
fireworks are used today. There is a growing interest in re-enacting this "ancient tradition" in the US, which has now spread to England.
Television and film A typical metalworker's anvil, with horn at one end and flat face at the other, is a standard prop for cartoon gags, as the epitome of a heavy and clumsy object that is perfect for dropping onto people. This visual metaphor is common, for example, in
Warner Brothers'
Looney Tunes and
Merrie Melodies shorts, such as those with
Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner. Anvils in cartoons were also referenced in an episode of
Gilmore Girls, where one of the main characters tries to have a conversation about "Where did all the anvils go?", a reference to their falling out of use on a general scale.
Animaniacs made frequent gags on the topic throughout its run, even having a kingdom named Anvilania, whose sole national product is anvils.
Books Dwarves were blacksmiths who used anvils for metalworking in
C. S. Lewis's
The Chronicles of Narnia, most iconically on ''
The Magician's Nephew and Prince Caspian''; as well as in
J. R. R. Tolkien's
The Hobbit.
Music set of tuned anvils Anvils have been used as
percussion instruments in several famous
musical compositions, including: •
Louis Andriessen:
De Materie (Part I), which features an extended solo for two anvils •
Kurt Atterberg:
Symphony No. 5 •
Daniel Auber: opera
Le Maçon •
Alan Silvestri:
The Mummy Returns •
Arnold Bax:
Symphony No. 3 •
The Beatles: "
Maxwell's Silver Hammer" makes prominent use of the anvil. Their roadie
Mal Evans played the anvil. •
Benjamin Britten:
The Burning Fiery Furnace •
Aaron Copland:
Symphony No. 3 •
Don Davis:
The Matrix trilogy •
Brad Fiedel:
The Terminator •
Neil Finn: "Song of the Lonely Mountain," written for the end credits of
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey •
Gustav Holst:
Second Suite in F for Military Band, which includes a movement titled "Song of the Blacksmith" •
Nicholas Hooper:
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince •
James Horner: Used it extensively in
Aliens, and his other films such as
Flightplan,
The Forgotten and
Titanic •
Anvil: "
Metal on Metal" •
Metallica: "
For Whom the Bell Tolls" •
Randy Newman:
Toy Story 3 •
Carl Orff:
Antigone •
Howard Shore:
The Lord of the Rings film trilogy. Used predominantly for the theme of
Isengard. •
Juan María Solare:
Veinticinco de agosto, 1983 and
Un ángel de hielo y fuego •
John Philip Sousa:
Dwellers of the Western World, in which the second movement,
The White Man, calls for two pairs of anvils, the one small, the other large •
Johann Strauss II:
Der Zigeunerbaron (
The Gipsy Baron; 1885): Ja, da wird das Eisen gefüge •
Josef Strauss:
Feuerfest!, op. 269 (1869). The title means "fireproof". This was the slogan of the Wertheim fireproof safe company, which commissioned the work. •
Edgard Varèse:
Ionisation •
Giuseppe Verdi:
Il Trovatore, featuring the famous
Anvil Chorus •
Richard Wagner:
Der Ring des Nibelungen in
Das Rheingold in scene 3, using 18 anvils
tuned in
F in three
octaves, and
Siegfried in act I, notably Siegfried's "Forging Song" (
Nothung! Nothung! Neidliches Schwert!) •
William Walton: ''
Belshazzar's Feast'' •
John Williams:
Jaws,
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith •
Carl Michael Ziehrer:
Der Traum eines österreichischen Reservisten (1890) • The Hammer And Anvil Song The longest johns All the music is made using a hammer and anvil or vocals as the name suggests Wagner's
Ring des Nibelungen is notable in using the anvil as
pitched percussion. The vast majority of extant works use the anvil as
unpitched. However
tuned anvils are available as musical instruments, albeit unusual. These are not to be confused with the "sawyers' anvils" used to "tune" big circular saw blades. Steel anvils are used for tuning for use as musical instruments, because those based partly on cast iron and similar materials give a duller sound; this is actually valued in industry, as pure steel anvils are troublesomely noisy, though energetically more efficient. The hammer and anvil have enjoyed varying popularity in orchestral roles.
Robert Donington pointed out that
Sebastian Virdung notes them in his book of 1510, and
Martin Agricola includes it in his list of instruments (Musica instrumentalis deudsch, 1529) largely as a compliment to
Pythagoras. In pre-modern or modern times anvils occasionally appear in operatic works by Berlioz, Bizet, Gounod, Verdi, and Wagner for example. Commonly pairs of anvils tuned a third apart are used. In practice modern orchestras commonly substitute a
brake drum or other suitable steel structure that is easier to tune than an actual anvil, although a visibly convincing anvil-shaped prop may be shown as desired. In
Das Rheingold Wagner scored for nine little, six mid-sized, and three large anvils, but orchestras seldom can afford instrumentation on such a scale. ==See also==