recycled
columns
- Baby-Sitting the Economy
The baby-sitting co-op that went bust teaches us something that could save the world.
Paul Krugman
posted Oct. 13, 2008 - What Do Pirates Want From Us?
Booty, of course.
Daniel Engber
posted Sept. 26, 2008 - Packing Heat in Helsinki
Why do Finns own so many guns?
Michelle Tsai
posted Sept. 23, 2008 - Exploit and Click
The fuss over Jill Greenberg's photography.
Jim Lewis
posted Sept. 16, 2008 - How Do They Estimate Hurricane Damage?
Why do the Ike numbers vary all the way from $6 billion to $18 billion?
Daniel Engber
posted Sept. 15, 2008 - Search for more recycled articles
- Subscribe to the recycled RSS feed
- View our complete recycled archive
How To Plan a Fireworks ShowThose big fireworks displays don't choreograph themselves.
By Daniel EngberPosted Wednesday, July 2, 2008, at 2:22 PM ET
Fourth of July fireworks displays have become increasingly intricate over the past few years. In a 2006 "Explainer," Slate investigated who actually synchs the crashing choruses and the flashing colors. The column is reprinted below.
Download the MP3 audio version of this story here.
Millions of Americans will celebrate July 4 by watching a fireworks show. How do they choreograph those midair pyrotechnics?
With a pen and paper or on the computer. First, the sponsor of a fireworks show will tell the pyrotechnics company what music they want to use for their display. (Sometimes they let the company decide.) The choreographer then listens to the music several times through to get an idea of which shells to use. Felix Grucci, who does the choreography for one of America's most prominent fireworks companies, will play the piece six or seven times at high volume before he starts writing out his ideas.
Some pieces of music demand certain fireworks effects at various moments in the song. If a choreographer were putting something together for the Phil Collins song "Two Hearts," he'd probably ask for a couple of shells that burst into heart shapes.
Fireworks by Grucci uses special forms that break the display into one-minute intervals. The form specifies exactly which type of shell should be fired at each moment. To time this properly, the choreographer has to know how long it takes for each shell to open up after it's fired. For example, if he wanted two hearts to appear just when Phil Collins mentions hearts, he'd have to mark them on the form about five seconds before the words come in the song.
In general, the bigger the shell, the longer it will take to burst and the higher it will go. By inserting the size, firing time, and type of each shell into a firing script, a choreographer can lay out a series of effects that unfold at different heights in time to the music. If he's using a fireworks choreography software package, he doesn't have to look up (or memorize) all of the height and timing information for each shell. Instead, he can drag items from a digital catalog directly into an online script.
A firing script also has to specify where the shells are fired from and at what angle. A big fireworks show will make use of mortars at several locations, and each location might have guns pointing in different directions. This lets the choreographer fill up the sky with effects from left to right as well as up and down. "Angling" also helps to keep things from getting too smoky in one particular area. If too many shells go off in the same spot, a haze may start to obscure the fireworks and make bright-red bursts look a little pink.
More advanced notations for fireworks choreography have been proposed over the years. The pyrotechnics expert Takeo Shimizu used a musical score to represent his designs: Each stave corresponded to a different firing location, and each note represented a particular kind of shell fired at a particular time. In his classic work on fireworks and fireworks choreography, Shimizu argues for simple arrangements of color and form: "Mixing red and yellow stars sometimes succeeds," he says, "but red and green looks dirty." He also pointed out that some effects—like tight, round bursts—build tension in the viewer, while others—like the willow effect—tend to release it.
Explainer thanks M. Philip Butler of Fireworks by Grucci and Dorothy Drewes of American Fireworks News.
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- Poll: 85 Of Americans Would Like To See Candidates Compete In Funny Obstacle Course
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 14:00:01 -0400 - 'I Am Under 18' Button Clicked For First Time In History Of Internet
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 07:30:31 -0400 - British Corpses Piling Up
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 07:00:36 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Fiscal Drunkards, Dry OutRuth Marcus | Which candidate could lead us to economic sobriety?
Meyerson: Gods That FailedMilbank: Confidence Isn't Cheap
- Telnaes: McCain's Foray Into Pandora's Box
- Gerson: How He Was Ambushed by History
- Parker: Palin Can Save the Mainstream Media
- Topic A: A Game-Changing Debate?
- Today's Headlines
- White House Fails to Fill Key Anti-Terror Job
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 17:27:11 GMT - Suicide Spurs Web Regulation in South Korea
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 15:24:47 GMT - Are You a 'Digital Native?'
Tue, 14 Oct 2008 20:55:29 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Over Before it Began?
Tue, 14 October 2008 17:58:14 GMT - A Bucket of Chicken and No Clue
Tue, 14 October 2008 16:57:24 GMT - The Hitler Comparison
Tue, 14 October 2008 19:01:10 GMT - » More from The Root

recycled













