
(Restored in HD!) This is an AURORATONE produced and created by British filmmaker Cecil Stokes for use in the treatment of mental disorders - definitely a kinder, gentler alternative to the electric-shock treatments which were then in vogue! The soundtrack features Bing Crosby and organist Eddie Dunstedter. An online biography of Bing Crosby notes that he was a shareholder in Mr. Stokes' "Auroratone Foundation." It also notes that Mr. Crosby made exclusive recordings of "Ave Maria," "Home on the Range," and "When You Wish Upon a Star," for Auroratones, but there's no mention of this film's soundtrack "When the Organ Played Oh Promise Me." It's possible that Mr. Stokes used a recording that Bing and Mr. Dunstedter had made several years earlier. This 16mm film print belonged to my grandfather, Gustave Martens of College Point, NY. He probably acquired it during the time he worked as a film projectionist at various psychiatric institutions in the New York-New Jersey area during the 1940's. Only once, during the 1960s, did Grandpa show the movie to us kids, and as you would expect we didn't know what to make of it. We asked him "What's this weird stuff, Grandpa?" and he himself wasn't sure! In 2007 I put on YouTube an inferior, low-resolution video of the film and, still not knowing what it was, gave it the best descriptive title I could think of: "Psychedelic Bing Crosby Video". Many of the comments it received were along the lines of "What was Bing smoking in that pipe <b>...</b>
Auroratone
Cecil Stokes
Bing Crosby
Oskar Fischinger
Hans Richter
Visual Therapy
Visual Music
robertwmartens