The latest reviews from Kevin Bryan.

Malcolm Holcombe, "Another Black Hole" (Gypsy Eyes Music)- Malcolm Holcombe's distinctive approach to  music-making has found him variously compared to everyone from Townes van Zandt to  Tom Waits, and the North Carolina native's fourteenth album represents an excellent addition to the impressive body of work that this gritty performer has assembled during the past three decades. Swamp rock legend Tony Joe White chips in  on guitar on a couple of tracks but Holcombe is still very much  the star of the show, delivering his compellingly grizzled Americana with honesty, perception and rough-hewn charm.

Buddy Guy & Junior Wells and Muddy Waters, "Drinkin' TNT 'N' Smokin' Dynamite + Messin' With The Blues" (Edsel Records)- This splendid audio-visual package was recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival in June 1974. Guitar and blues harp duo Guy and Wells performed  a commendably tight set aided and abetted by the likes of  Bill Wyman and veteran  piano player  Pinetop Perkins before joining forces with the legendary Muddy Waters for a DVD featuring classic creations such as "Hoochie Coochie Man," "Mannish Boy" and  the grand finale, "Got My Mojo Workin'," which had been a key element  of the great man's  live act ever since he first recorded it in 1956.

Sad Cafe, "Access All Areas" (Edsel Records)- This hour long TV showcase from the "Rockstage" series was captured for posterity  by Central Television in 1980, boasting  a set list liberally peppered with choice extracts  from Sad Cafe's most successful album, 

"Facades," including hit singles such as "Strange Little Girl," "Everyday Hurts" and "My Oh My." The melodic Mancunians  are captured at their most polished and musicianly on "Access All Areas ", although this otherwise excellent  CD / DVD package does have a few issues with sound quality from time to time.

Vladimir Feltsman, "J.S.Bach : French Suites" (Nimbus Alliance)- These elegant  and charming  keyboard works  provide ideal vehicles  for the consumate artistry of  Vladimir Feltsman, the Moscow born musician who has been hailed as "one of the supreme Bach keyboard exponents of our time."  Feltsman is  certainly  in  fine fettle here as he breathes new life into a series of stylised dances which were originally penned as a wedding gift for his young and highly musical wife, Anna Magdalena Bach.