Slightly off-topic, but - The reason one quenches brass after anneal, rather than cooling it slowly like iron/steel, is that many brass items contain lead. At the anneal temperature the lead, or much of it, is dissolved in the brass. If it cools slowly the lead precipitates (like, rain from clouds) as molten lead in the crystal (grain) boundaries. That weakens the piece. Quench it, and the lead simply does not have time to come out, stays in solution and the thing is reasonably ductile.
At least that's the theory. Used to be, in Ancient Times, that "brass" meant an ally of copper and zinc, whilst "bronze" was copper and tin. Lead was frequently present in either one. From mid-19th century on there arose about a zillion different copper alloys, with more-or-less arbitrary designations as "brass" or "bronze". One popular cast copper alloy is "silicon bronze". Silicon is cheap and it does make the molten metal flow well and fill the mold. The result is a hard alloy with a bit of a copper tint and a pretty hard casting. I personally do not know about annealing them.
Lead. Lead helps make a sound casting, which is why cast copper alloy plumbing fixtures all had some lead in them to prevent leaks. Until California banned that lead. One 1866 Winchester frame which I analyzed was a gunmetal (88%copper 10%zinc 2%tin) with about 1.5% lead which I presume was added for castability. The lead sure doesn't help the strength.
Lead is why you do not attempt to heat brass for bending. At least not more than one try. That lead, which is usually if not always present, melts and makes the metal crumble when you try to bend it. Lead is in all brass bar to improve machinability, as well as in some or all brass sheet/plate, same reason.
Once again, I offer for your consideration that your gun-life will be smoother if you buy all your castings from Reaves Goehring. He and his ?son son-in-law? just bought the foundry that had been suppling them with nice soft brass hardware and some not-so-soft silicon bronze 'hawks. Dunno if there is any lead in his soft brass, I personally don't heat brass to bend it, period.