The
founder of AMORC, Harvey Spencer Lewis, claimed to be a great inventor,
and the most famous device he supposedly invented was a device that
converted sounds into colored lights, which he called the master color organ Luxatone.
The man on the left is Ralph Maxwell Lewis, one of Lewis's sons, who later became the second emperor of AMORC.
And
the microphone shown in the photo was used to input voice or music, and
the inverted triangular screen showed colored flashes that synchronized
with this sound.
The device was made up of spotlights, vacuum tubes, a power transformer and radio components.
There
was a main detection circuit that when it detected a sound frequency
through the microphone, the circuit measured the frequency and powered
the colored bulbs in combination to mix the desired color.
The
three bulbs represented the three primary colors from which all other
colors could be mixed by lighting the bulbs at varying intensity and the
mixed color appeared in the center of the triangular screen.
BROCHURE
Spencer Lewis in the 1930s published the following pamphlet detailing the Luxatone, and sent it to newspapers and members of AMORC.
I transcribe the text:
THE HISTORY OF LUXATONE, THE MASTER COLOR ORGAN
COLOR ORGANS...
Ever since the philosopher
Aristotle suggested the idea of a relationship between color harmony and sound
harmony in his work entitled “De Sensu," musicians and artists in many
lands and in various periods of the development of art and music have attempted
to create an instrument that would demonstrate the psychological synthesis of
nature’s colors and nature’s sounds.
Early in the sixteenth century
Arcimboldo, Milanese painter, invented a system of color harmony based upon a
color scale closely related to the musical scale, and no doubt Sir Isaac Newton
was impressed by Kepler’s “The Harmonies of the Universe," for he and many
other scientists as well as philosophers believed that there was some
mysterious fundamental relationship between colors and sounds, and that there
might be a justification for the thought that the “Music of the Spheres” was
possible of demonstration. Newton was greatly impressed by the fact that there
was very evidently a relationship between the relative spaces occupied by the
principal colors of the spectrum, and the rate ratios of the notes of the
diatonic scale.
All attempts at an arbitrary
division of the spectrum into seven principal colors composing an octave led to
no satisfying results until science determined in its experimental laboratories
that there was a definite relationship between the rates of vibration of a note
of music, and the rates of vibration of color.
Psychologists even of the
earliest days were impressed with the possibility that the effects upon the
human consciousness of music were not purely auditory, but that some harmonic
key of musical vibration equivalent to a rate that would produce a color
affected some faculty or functioning of the human consciousness and effected a
mental impression that accompanied the stimulation produced by the sound of the
note.
Musicians, and especially those
who devoted much time to the composition of music, were often led to see that
in creating a theme for any passage or movement of a composition they were
assisted in the arrangement of the notes by selecting those which seemed to
merge into the subtle consciousness of the theme.
They attempted to select elements
of sound that agreed with the elements of color composing the theme-picture
held in their consciousness during the time of composing. It was for this
reason that many eminent masters of music spoke of tone pictures, symphonies of
color and sound, and similar expressions which were intended to convey the idea
that a perfect musical composition devoted to any definite theme aroused in the
human consciousness a reflection of the pictorial theme held in the mind of the
composer
Such ideas, of course, were very
vague, and rather mystical, but, nevertheless, intriguing not only to musicians
and artists, but to physicists. It was not until the Jesuit, Louis Bertrand
Castel, an eminent mathematician, devoted much of his time to the subject, that
a workable foundation For the demonstration of the various theories was
prepared. His experiments were published in a book called “La Musique en
Couleurs,” in 1720, and in another book published in 1763 six years after his
death. In these books he described a contrivance he had experimented with, and
which he called a Color Clavessin.
While Aristotle is probably the true father of the idea of color music, Castel
is undoubtedly the pioneer in scientific methods to demonstrate the laws
involved.
Not more than ten or twelve color organs have
ever been constructed and demonstrated in a practical manner up to the present
period of time. The tremendous cost involved, the many months and years of
laborious experimentation, and the many branches of artistic and scientific
knowledge required, have prevented any commercial concept of color music, and
has made the construction of color-organs beyond the capabilities of those who
have recognized its fundamental possibilities.
Of the earliest experimenters we
find a D. D. Jameson published a pamphlet in 1844 dealing with the relationship
of music and colors, and later on devised a small organ to merely demonstrate
its possibilities.
In 1893 William Schooling
published a small article dealing with the subject, and suggested the use of
vacuum tubes in connection with the keyboard. In the same year Professor
Alexander Wallace Riming' ton, Professor of Fine Arts in Queen’s College,
London, conceived the idea of a color organ constructed along entirely new
lines, and in 1895 demonstrated the organ in St. James Hall, London. In 1911 he
published a book “The Art of Mobile Color” but ad' mitted in his text that he
had not found or used any of the laws or principles which determined the
precise relationship of individual colors to the individual notes of the musical
scale.
Mary Hallock Greenewalt, an
American pianist, was one of the experimenters in the field of color' music in
recent years, and in 1919 Thomas Wilfred of Denmark completed an instrument for
projecting colors upon the screen independent of sound, and demonstrated this
device in America, and in 1925 in Paris, London, and Copenhagen. But this had
naught to do with color music.
In Australia Alexander Burnett
Hector devised a color organ using incandescent lamps combined with vacuum tubes.
Mr. M. Luckiesh, an American illuminating engineer also experimented with
similar devices. Other experimenters have been M. Carol Berard, and M. Valere
Bemeird, both of France. In England Leonard C. Taylor, Claud Bragdon, and
Adrian Bernard Klein constructed experimental instruments for the purpose of testing
the theories involved.
STRANGE LAWS INVOLVED
Nearly all of the experiments of
these pioneers have failed because of the lack of knowledge regarding the
precise relationship between definite colors and definite notes of both the
musical and spectrum scale. It has always been admitted by those who wrote
theoretically on the subject that if the true relationship between color and
sound was established playing of a harmonious chord on the organ would result
in a harmonious blending of related colors on a screen, and the playing of a
discord or inharmonious chord would result in the projection upon the screen of
colors that would clash because of their inharmonious relationship.
These two interesting features of
the theory were never realized in the fourteen known models of color organs
that have been made since Aristotle suggested the idea, except in the case of a
miniature color-organ made by Dr. H. Spencer Lewis in 1916 in New York City,
and exhibited there for two months before a group of Rosicrucian scientists,
musicians, artists, and prominent persons as a preliminary to the complete
study of the harmonics of music and color for the purpose of evolving a
definite system of color and sound symphony. Mr. A. Wallace Rimington, while
Professor of Fine Arts at Queen’s College, London, said:
“What' ever may be the divergence of opinion as to how far the analogies
between color and sound extend, one thing at least is certain; namely, that the
color-music opens up a new world of beauty and interest as yet, to a great
extent, unexplored.”
Sir Hubert Von Herkomer R. A., an
eminent authority, writing on the subject said:
“It has been denied by some that color suggests musical sounds, and that
musical sounds suggest color, but it is safe to say that a psychological
affinity is felt by artists and musicians between sound and color; hence the
use of common terms of expression between them. The painter speaks of a note in
a painting, and the musician speaks of a tone picture . . . Let me say here
that the colorsense is by far the most sensitive and delicate of all the
faculties that go to the making of the artist's brain.”
The great Physicist, Professor
Albert A. Michel son, wrote in 1903 as follows:
“Indeed, so strongly do these color phenomena appeal to me that I
venture to predict that in the not very distant future there may be a color art
analogous to the art of sound— a color music in which the performer seated
before a literally chromatic scale can play the colors of the spectrum in any
succession or combination, flashing on a screen all possible graduations of
color, simultaneously or in any other desired succession, producing at will the
most delicate and subtle modulations of light and color, or the most gorgeous
and startling contrasts and color chords! It seems to me that we have here at
least as great a possibility of rendering all the sensations, moods, and
emotions of the human mind as in the older art."
PICTORIAL MUSIC
In the foregoing statement by
Professor Michelson is summed up briefly the real quest and goal of all who have
experimented with the color organ, and in the Luxatone now perfected after many
years of research, study, experimental don, and careful construction on the
part of Dr. H. Spencer Lewis, we have a living, vibrating, masterful
demonstration of this new instrument of art.
The musician seated at the
Luxatone becomes an artist in color as well as in sound, but he need center his
thoughts only upon the laws of musical composition, and harmony. As he plays in
any mood and to express any theme that his inner consciousness may visualize,
he will find the tones of music interpreting the theme and mood while on the
large satin screen before him will be portrayed with all of the masterly
strokes of a genius in art the pictural representation of the theme being expressed
by the music. Harmony, rhythm, and movement with all of the incidentals of
progression and counterpoint are made visibly manifest on the screen as the
technique of a painter.
If the organist plays a
militaristic theme, the pictures painted upon the screen by the notes of music
are those which the human consciousness recognizes as typically associated with
warfare, strife, and contest. The pictures are as invigorating, inspiring, and
arousing as is the music. A simple folksong or one which expresses the
atmosphere of a pastoral played upon the organ will produce pictures that
suggest quiet and peaceful landscapes. Musical themes interpreting rippling
waters, gentle breeds, or storms will produce pictures of a like them upon the
screen.
The pictures are painted in fixed,
and mobile colors, and with symbolical designs and elements of form and color
in rhythmic motion. The color painting is done automatically by the notes of
the music, and if any selection is played a second time in an identical manner,
the pictures produced by the music will be identical. The pictures upon the
screen often change at a rate of from five to seven a minute while many of them
remain fixed for several minutes gradually evolving or dissolving into others.
NOT A COMMERCIAL PROPOSITION
The Luxatone is not a commercial
proposition since it is not for sale, and duplicates of it cannot be made
commercially profitable. The purpose in creating it and in devoting such a
large amount of time and money to its perfection has been solely to demonstrate
the psychological facts pertaining to the relationship of color and music as
taught by the Rosicrucians in the middle ages, and at the present time in
connection with their doctrines of transmutation in which they have always
claimed that the rates of vibration of all atomically constructed matter are related
by harmonic cycles and periods, and that by changing the rates of vibration of
one element or one manifestation, the element or manifestation may be changed
in nature.
The recent demonstrations on the
part of science in the fields of metallurgy have proved that gross elements can
be transmuted into gold in accordance with the theory taught by the Rosicrucians.
But this process is of no commercial value because of the extreme cost involved
in producing even a small grain of gold. The Luxatone is now the most recent
and elaborate device for the demonstration of the transmutation of sound into
color. It is said by those who have witnessed the preliminary demonstrations of
the color organ that those who are deaf easily recognize the theme of a musical
composition by the pictures produced upon the screen. M any eminent
psychologists insist that the sound waves do create in a subjective form of our
consciousness invisible pictures which we sense through a little known faculty
that may be brought into development, or awakened in some way, by a proper
adaptation of sound pictures produced through color.
OBSERVATIONS
In his pamphlet it is clear that Spencer Lewis worked as a publicist before founding AMORC, because he exaggeratedly exalts a simple device that has nothing extraordinary and is only a color sound tuner.
And since Spencer Lewis was a big trickster, I wouldn't be surprised if he
hired someone to build this thing, and then Lewis took credit for it.
CURIOSITY
It seems that the filmmakers of the 1955 science fiction film “This Island Earth” were inspired by the Luxatone to shape their Interoscitor , which in the film was a communications device built by extraterrestrials:
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