Looking for Pre/Pro with great 2 ch sound


I'm looking for advice on pre-pro's with emphasis on 2-channel and multi-channel music performance. The budget is around 1500 for a used unit, or maybe up to about 3000 for a new one.

The leading candidate so far is a used Anthem AVM-20/30. I've read great reviews on their sound quality and the older ones seem like a good bang for the buck. I'm not concerned with HDMI or every last surround sound mode. My other candidate (if I can swing it) is a Linn Unidisk SC. If I go that route than it obviously combines a great disk player with the pre-pro. Any other ideas and/or opinions?

Thanks!
bmdduck
I think the Casanova is the way to go. 2 channel listening is awesome, although I think the processing for home theater lacks a little. For the price you can pick them up for, I do not think there is a better product for the money.
I agree 100% with friz1313 with the Theta Casa Nova recommendation; System did not loose much when it went from a Klyne front end to the casa nova; probally due to the ability to have so much speaker adjustments (phase,crossover type,crossover freq and slope) having these selections resulted being able to custom taylor your system for its listening enviroment.
Having the circle surround option is very well worth it,very enjoyable.
A little more background on this question: I have Linn Ninka speakers and I'm considering going to Linn amplifiers (Linn 5125 multichannel amp) to actively power the speakers. On other threads everyone says to pair Linn amps and speakers with Linn preamps. The problem is the Linn multichannel controllers are either really expensive or out of date (like the 5103).

Would the Theta or Proceed pair well with Linn amps? The other option is to use a pre-pro for multichannel listening and a Linn preamp for two channel with pass through for multichannel. This just seems needlessly complex. Any further thoughts?
A Meridian 568 or 568.2 would be an excellent used processor to get.

Good Luck
I currently own Linn Unidisk SC. I have previously owned Meridian G68 and Proceed AVP2+6. They are all very musical. You should be able to put together musically satisfying system with any of these.

I like Unidisk simply because of its superb SACD performance. When playing SACD the background noise is so low you can hear and feel the recorded ambiance on many of the recordings. The redbook CD performance is also pretty good. Meridian was probably a touch more smooth and airy in redbook CD and DVD Audio, but the difference was small enough. Proceed sounds fuller and more authoritative compared to both Meridian and Linn. Proceed, while it was a very good processor, was tad dark sounding, and ultimately I preferred more lively and airy sound of Meridian and Linn.