SACRILEGE!?
No; Not Even the Work of Prince Baccaratti

That's right, neither of the two. Rather, this is for musicians. If you want to play the oldies and do them justice, you need the sounds of the time. This involoveed stings, piano, Hammond Organ, and Tenor Saxophone.

These instruments, the Ensoniq SQ-80 and Casio WK-3000 series are the best you can get. For strings, it's the SQ with its voice archetecture of three audio oscillaotrs and three Low Frequency Oscillators for the best strings you can get, with the classic strings "warble" that does not repeat itself as with other sampled strings, becuase you syntheize them yourself. Its piano samples are very good and the Casio with good strings good piano, very good organ and excellent saxophones as well as the Voce v3 module for the best Hammond sound that you can tuck under your arm. The Casio will give you the best 1960 Wurlitzer electric piano for WHAT'D I SAY?. The SQ-80 will give you three ranks of string with 8 notes of polyphony for some Drifters, Orbison or Shirelles sounds. Either will give you that much-loved but hideous abused piano from THIS TIME by Troy Shondell, THOSE OLDIES BUT GOODIES by Little caesar & the Romans or MR. POSTMAN by the Marvelettes. I use the wk piano for MOODY RIVER, the 1961 Pat Bonne hit. I say GOODBYE, CRUEL WORLD with the SQ-80 Occarina, just as James Darren did with the real thing. Use the Tenor Sax for ANGEL BABY< by Rosie & the Origninals and LOVE YOU SO by Ron Holden & the Thunderbirds. The wk piano and sax go together for the Clovers' LOVE POTION NUMBER 9. I use the elctric guitar for late 1959's SANDY by Larry Hall. Grab hold of the drawbars on the v3 for DUKE OF EARL, RINKY DINK or THE HAPPY ORGAN.

so, for the sounds of yesterday pick up on the instruemts of today