
In Counter Culture Blues, the church's peaceful Sunday sermon is shattered by the sound of gun shots on the estate next door.
Counter Culture Blues, the latest Inspector Lewis mystery on PBS Masterpiece Mystery!, treats the viewer to three murders – a young boy, a rocker, and a music professor. This episode of Inspector Lewis kicks off to the third season and does not disappoint. Half the fun of mysteries set in England is witnessing the audaciousness of the characters and the entertaining display of British wit. Both are offered in abundance in this episode about aging rockers.

Richie (David Hayman) looks on as Franco (Anthony Higgins) sees Esme (Joanna Lumley) for the first time in 35 years.
The murders coincide with the reappearance of Esme Ford, the front singer of a once hugely popular 70’s rock band, Midnight Addiction. Esme was thought to have killed herself 35 years ago, but much to the shocked surprise of Ritchie Maguire, the band’s leather-faced leader, she walks back into his life, hoping to ressurrect the band and duplicate their past glory. It was Esme, the “tart with the heart”, who had been the “enchantment who held the band together.” While Richie Maguire had recently attempted a solo CD, whose master had mysteriously been wiped clean, the members of the band were living richly off the proceeds of their past glory.
We first meet Inspector Lewis (Kevin Whately) at home and about to sit down to a microwave dinner, when he and Sergeant Hathaway (Laurence Fox) are called to investigate the illegal hunting of game near a church during Sunday service. The culprit is Richie, whose estate is nearby. Inspector Lewis knows the band’s history intimately, for in his youth he had been a huge fan. His surprise upon encountering Esme is as great as Richie’s, and it conjures up memories of a poster of Esme sans shirt and bra that he had purchased as a boy and hung in his room.
The rockers have not aged well, and the actors who play Richie (David Hayman), Bone (Zig Byfield), Mack (Hilton McRae), and Franco (Anthony Higgins) are as craggy as Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, and Ron Wood of the Rolling Stones.
I won’t give too much of the plot away, since you can still see this episode online. This intelligent and often witty script was written by Guy Andre, who adapted the screenplay from a story by Nick Deare. The series itself is inspired by Colin Dexter’s’ Inspector Morse novels and is greatly enhanced by an excellent cast. Simon Callow portrays Vernon Oxe, the openly gay manager who claims that the band was his creation. Oxe’s sudden appearance in Oxford coincides with that of Esme Ford.
Joanna Lumley as Esme is superb, but then I am biased in her favor. I will always adore Joanna for her turn as Patsy Stone, the boozing, smoking, non-eating, free-loving character of Absolutely Fabulous. I could not help but laugh at Esme’s brazen reason for sleeping with two men on the same night – to assure them that she had not forgotten either of them. My only beef with Joanna as Esme was her obvious wig, which was is not Ms Lumley’s fault. For the viewer’s sake, could they not have found a better hair piece?
The plot of Counter Culture Blues is complicated, but still manages to hold the viewer’s interest. Sub plots abound. While they did not throw me off my scent (I figured out who the murderer was fairly early on), they added a richness and complexity to the world that Inspector Lewis and Sergeant Hathaway inhabit.
Richie’s daughter, Kitten (Perdita Weeks), has mysterious dealings with a nasty young man named Peter, which gives James Hathaway (Laurence Fox) something productive to do. Hathaway is no slouch, and he is on to Peter’s sordid schemes. His confrontation of the young man are among my favorite scenes in this production.
The mysterious death of Jason, the boy who was murdered at the gates of Richie’s mansion, and of two other charactes keep Inspector Lewis on his toes.

Jason's friend, Declan (Daniel Kaluuya) bravely helps Inspector Lewis solve why the boy was murdered.
It turns out that free-loving Richie has a wife. Helen Baxendale as Caroline is given the best line in this episode. When asked by Inspector Lewis why she disappears for weeks on end, she says she can always tell when her husband is gearing up to have another affair and she wanted to give him the necessary space. “He’s like a dog, really. Needs exercizing.”
As usual the reader is treated to scenes in and around Oxford, always a delight, and Rebecca Front once againmakes her appearance as Chief Superintendent Jean Innocent, telling Lewis that “If my life is disagreeable, yours is going to be hell. “ Neither Lewis nor Hathaway can do their jobs without the sharp eyed skills of Drl Laura Hobson, capably played by Clare Holman. It would be lovely if she and Lewis got together, but that is my mothering gene working in overdrive.

Rebecca Front as Chief Superintendent Innocent is both exasperated with Inspector Lewis and in awe of his skills.
The identity of the murderer is somewhat obvious, but the ending is satisfying nevertheless. Joanna Lumley is entertaining as ever and this episode is worth watching for her performance alone. If you want to see the series again, it will be shown online at this link starting August 30 and through September 12. The other episodes scheduled for Season III are:
- The Dead of Winter, September 5
- Dark Matter, September 12
- Your Sudden Death Question, September 19
- Falling Darkness, September 26
Needless to say, it is going to be a great September of Sundays with Inspector Lewis at PBS!
I have a feeling that weeks will feel interminable from one Sunday to the next!
[…] August 30, 2009 by Vic For a review of Inspector Lewis Series III, 2010, Counter Culture Blues, Click Here. […]
Excitement!!!! My favorite way to end a Sunday!
I’m going to disagree with you respectfully, Vic. This episode felt flat to me. Joanna Lumley’s Esme was a bit predictable and the central story carried very little weight. As you said, the murders were easy to solve, especially when you heard the line that the murderer preferred to maintain some distance from his victims. Let’s hope the next episode is better.
Thank you for this review! Mystery-wise this would rank as one of my least favorite Lewis episodes, but when I take into consideration the interaction between Lewis & Hathaway, in that respect it ranks higher. Watching their relationship develop over the course of this series has been a delight, and the humor and way they play off each other in this episode was a lot of fun to watch. Laurence Fox in particular, IMO, got many opportunities this time to show off his propensity for sarcasm and a wonderfully dry sense of humor. I do hope though that next week I find the mystery itself a little more engaging…this one just didn’t click for me.
Counter Culture Blues, was on our TV a couple of years ago. I remember it having a dark edge.
Rock star lives tend to have a dark edge. This programme captures that really well.
I have yet to see the episode – but I’ll catch in this week some time – but I really delight in Sgt. Hathaway and Laurence Fox’s performance and development of the character.
Vic – I too adore Joanna Lumley! She and Patsy were the original Sex and City girls and no matter how many times I may have seen an episode, I gladly sit down and watch again.
I enjoyed this episode, maybe not as much as others in the Inspector Lewis series, but I love Joanna Lumley in anything.
On another note – does anyone know what on earth happened to Anthony Higgins?! He used to be so handsome and he is not that old, I think early 60’s. Maybe he HAS been living a Keith Richards-type lifestyle!
Mirabelle,
Please see anthonyhiggins.narod
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Help?! Due to a recording error I missed the ending and Canadians can’t access the episode on the PBS website. Do you know where I can read how it ended? Thanks!
[…] The Dead of Winter […]
Mick Jagger Biography – A Legend in Classic Rock
01.16.10
Mick Jagger is one of the most well-known and highly respected musicians in the world. He is a living legend whose career has spanned 5 decades and he, with the help of his Rolling Stones band members, have sold millions of albums worldwide.
So when did it all start? When did Mick Jagger decide he would be part of one of the most popular bands in the history of the world?
He was born in Dartford, Kent (England) in on July 26th, 1943. Amazingly, he met Keith Richards at the tender age of 4, lost touch, then became reacquainted on a train in 1960. Mick left the London School of Economics to become a rock musician. The Rolling Stones formed between 1960 and 1962. Mick Jagger played the harmonica and was on lead vocals, Keith Richards and Brian Jones on guitar, Charlie Watts played the drums, Bill Wyman on bass. Their style was a mix of blues and rock, combining the styles of Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry.
Thanks for a fabulous site!
Minor point: it’s DowNton Abbey.
(Your top right announcement.)
Regards
Pamina