This inventive bank of sounds was found on Compuserve. It was created
and distributed there by the programmer, one Randy Brown 
(CIS ID:74034,2073, or internet mail at: 74034.2073@compuserve.com).

Not all of these are (traditionally) musical, but not all are 
intended to, me thinks. Check it out.

Eh?

ADDENDUM:

    WARNING:  The file rndybrwn.syx contains a full dump of a JV-880's Internal
    Performances, Internal Patches, and the User Drum Kit.  Loading this file
    will replace all of these areas in your JV (it is compatable with JV-80,
    JV-880, JV-90, and JV-1000).

	The messages in this file are set for Unit Number 18, which is not the
    default Unit Number for a JV as shipped from Roland.  The default Unit Number
    is 17.  You will need to set your JV's Unit Number to 18 (at least temporarily
    while loading the file) before your JV will respond to the messages in this
    file.

	I have provided the rndybrwn.prf, rndybrwn.bnk and rndybrwn.kit files
    containing the component parts of the rndybrwn.syx file, and modified so that
    the unit number in the messages is the Roland default value of 17.

	The rndybrwn.prf contains the performance bank of 16 performances, the
    rndybrwn.bnk contains the patch bank of 64 patches, and the rndybrwn.kit
    contains the 61 rhythm notes of the drum kit.  The rndybrwn.syx file was
    apparently intended as a patch bank, I have no idea if the data in the
    performances or the drum kit is anything beyond the factory settings, but I
    decided to provide them so interested parties could decide for themselves.

	These files will overwrite the JV Internal memory that they are
    associated with (the rndybrwn.bnk will overwrite the 64 Internal Patches, the
    rndybrwn.prf will overwrite the 16 Internal Performances, and the rndybrwn.kit
    will overwrite the User Drum Kit), but at least they won't overwrite
    "unexpected" parts of the JV's memory.
