Heights Magazine

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bestofheights.com march + april 2021

Real Estate Is a Boon to Local Economy Will New Orders Kill Oil and Gas Texas’ “Wild West” Mantra World Renowned Conductor Coming Here Annual Intown Real Estate Report



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INTOWN

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ON THE COVER 10

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8 PUBLISHER’S LETTER 10-12

WILL NEW ORDERS KILL OIL AND GAS

14-19

INTOWN FOCUS: REAL ESTATE

20-21

STAR CONDUCTOR TO LEAD HSO

22-23

FINANCIAL FOCUS

PRODUCTION

PUBLISHER

M. A. Haines EDITOR

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6 | HEIGHTS | March + April 2021


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Publisher’s Letter The Great “Wild West” handpicked by a Governor but truly independent regulatory oversight. That is not what we have with our PUC (Public Utility Commission ) or ERCOT (Electric Reliability Council Of Texas). Many of the people running those groups have resigned as the fall guys. However, the blame is squarely on our state government for not winterizing our power plants. There was plenty of notice that this could happen and being on our own separate grid backfired as El Paso who is on The low and no state income taxes have a national power grid had zero power outages. fueled growth and prosperity in Texas as we see Some 500,000 Texans, still weeks later as of from our record real estate sales year after year. this writing, are without drinkable water. Some People and companies have been relocating 30 were left dead here and over 80 in our state to Houston and the Lone Star State in record numbers for decades due to the job opportunities, capitol. This lack of regulation, low taxes, and norelatively low cost of living, and no state income tax. Texas’s most recent prize catch was attracting zoning laws has served us well in most instances, with some notable exceptions. While the “wild the forward-thinking entrepreneur, Elon Musk of west” mentality has spurred our growth it has also Tesla fame. created communities with strip clubs, churches, As Chinese culture taught us, with the “yin” and schools in the same neighborhood. Now we goes the “yang”, as the world watched the see the problems of short-sightedness and budget steep price of a laissez-faire attitude toward regulation. It appears some things need regulation shortfalls that affect many key areas including police, fire, and schools. Oh and the power grid. and independent accountability. Not agencies s a Texan, I enjoy the “Wild West” mentality that leaves us devoid of so many rules and regulations that can stifle business growth. However, that “can do, will do” entrepreneurial business-friendly climate has its drawbacks. Most of us found out the hard way (with the exception of a few supposed leaders) while shivering in the cold and thirsty. Many were not that fortunate.

LOUISIANA CRAWFISH SEASON IS HERE!

4302 RICHMOND AVE HOUSTON, TX 77027 8 | HEIGHTS | March + April 2021


WORTHWHILE CONVERSATIONS

REQUIRED MINIMUM DISTRIBUTIONS OR MAXIMUM CONFUSION?

Chairman & CEO, J. Harold Williams, CPA/PFS, CFP®, discusses the importance of a wellcoordinated retirement plan to navigate the rules of Required Minimum Distributions and maximize after-tax cash flow with Wealth Advisor, Lantz Bowman, CFP®. “MAXIMUM CONFUSION?” – WHAT ARE WE TALKING ABOUT HERE? The IRS specifies Required Minimum Distributions, or “RMDs”, that you must withdraw from IRAs, 401(k)s, and other retirement accounts at certain ages. People seem to know these rules exist and that penalties for mistakes are hefty, but most don’t know the details. In 50 years of talking with families, we’ve observed that many people worry significantly about this area of their planning.

WHAT KIND OF DETAILS? We hear many questions…I’m turning 72 (the new updated magic age); When must I take my first required minimum distribution? Should I delay my first distribution to year 2, as allowed by the rules? Do I have to wait until the day I’m actually 72 to start my distributions? Can I wait until I’m 72 to take distributions from an inherited

IRA account? I’m still working past 72 and in a 401(k) plan – do I have to withdraw money from it? Can I roll over my RMD amount into a Roth IRA after paying the required taxes?

WOW, THIS IS STARTING TO SOUND LIKE A “MINEFIELD”… It CAN be complicated. The key is to do the necessary homework, because these RMDs are just one piece of the retirement puzzle, and should be part of a well-coordinated plan. Our Wealth Planning Committee is a group of attorneys, CPAs, MBAs, and other professionals who meet regularly. They discuss and analyze how to meet RMDs while maximizing a family’s after-tax cash flow. Committee Chairman, Phillip Hamman, CFA, CFP®, likes to say, “The RMD rules ARE complicated, but they offer excellent planning opportunities.” Families unable to invest the time for homework should seek help.

ANYTHING TO WATCH OUT FOR? Most important: Seek independent and unbiased advice from an advisor obligated to act as your fiduciary, rather than someone with an agenda to sell financial products. This fiduciary business model is what we follow at Linscomb & Williams. We are ready to sit down for a nocost, no-obligation, exploratory conversation either virtually or at our office. Imagine the peace of mind from eliminating confusion about this and other important areas of your finances.

For more information, or a copy of our Form ADV, Part II, with all of our disclosures, call Grant Williams at 713 840 1000 or visit www.linscomb-williams.com.

Linscomb & Williams is located at 1400 Post Oak Blvd., Ste. 1000 in Houston, TX For more information call 713 840 1000 or visit www.linscomb-williams.com. Linscomb & Williams is not an accounting firm.


Will New Orders Kill Oil and Gas Two Houston Oil Companies Suss-Out Biden’s Pause on Oil and Gas Leasing in the Gulf of Mexico By Virginia Billeaud Anderson

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ollowing a toned-down swearing-in with Gaga and J-Lo, President Biden began to sign executive orders, one of which temporarily suspends oil and gas leasing in the Gulf of Mexico. Biden’s January 27 order directs the Interior Secretary to pause on new oil and natural gas leases on public lands and offshore waters, and review leasing and permitting practices. Where lawful, the Secretary can adjust royalties or take other appropriate action to account for corresponding climate costs. Wondering if Biden’s order sucker punches Houston oil companies leasing in the Gulf, I peeked at two of them. Onshore federal leases, Keystone, and mega-majors like Chevron are beyond this article’s scope, its focus is Houston independents operating in the Gulf. In November 2020, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM)

Talos Energy’s GOM Mississippi Canyon Operations. Talos Website Image by David Duncan

14 | HEIGHTS | January + February 2021

conducted a sale of Gulf of Mexico federal offshore oil and gas leases in New Orleans. Lease Sale 256 generated over $120 million in high bids, spread over 93 tracts that covered 517,733 acres. It was the 131st GOM sale to be held since the government began offshore leasing in 1954. W&T Offshore, a Houston-based independent that has been exploring and producing oil and natural gas in the GOM since 1983 was among 23 companies with high bids. W&T bid $518,000 for 8,800 acres on two offshore blocks for a five-year lease term and 12.5% royalty. A puny shopping trip, compared to the year before when W&T snatched 83,800 acres in a GOM Lease Sale. That same year the company acquired, not at auction, 119,500 federal Gulf acres and an onshore processing facility. BOEM typically took up to 90 days to accept or reject a high bid, and Biden

signed his order within 90 days of the sale, so it wasn’t a dumb question to ask W&T if Biden’s order waylaid their leases. Al Petrie in Investor Relations replied the Bureau awarded their leases before Biden issued his order, W&T is registered as Lessor. Nothing else, however, is certain. People are calling, Petrie said, but they don’t have answers, and they don’t know if the executive order will delay drilling permits. The company intends to cooperate with the administration, and is encouraged by the fact that the Bureau issued some drilling permits after Biden signed. In October 2020, an analyst asked W&T’s CEO Tracy Krohn if they planned to participate in the November Lease Sale, the implication being a Biden victory could unleash permitting delays and costs uncertainty. Yes, Krohn said, there’s no reason not to. W&T doesn’t


Talos Energy’s Gulf of Mexico Operations. Image from Talos Energy facebook 2019. Image by David Duncan

routinely frack nor flare gas in the GOM, and has a proven safety record. The country needs the energy, and the government needs the royalties. If W&T sounded cautious, Houston’s Talos Energy’s seemed to suss-out business as usual. Two days after Biden signed, Talos which did not shop in the November Lease Sale but which has 1.5 million leased GOM acres in its inventory, told investors the order pauses new leasing activities but has “no impact on existing operations or permits for existing leases, which are continuing to be reviewed and approved. Talos does not expect any material near-term impact to its current production or its ability to conduct development, exploitation and exploration activities.” The company expects to continue development efforts across the industry’s 11.7 million acres of active federal GOM leases. Talos’ CEO Timothy Duncan added, “Despite the current regulatory environment, we do not see any impediments to continuing to execute our business - providing reliable, secure, affordable, domestic energy resources to supply our society while operating in a safe, environmentally and socially responsible way. Undoubtedly oil and natural gas

play a crucial role in our daily lives, supplying the growing demand for energy to generate electricity, fuel cars and airplanes and power domestic manufacturing, demand best supplied with our own domestic resources, rather than importing from abroad, which would increase emissions, increase consumer costs, decrease government revenues, reduce se-

curity and destroy American jobs.” If indeed Biden’s open-ended suspension doesn’t affect existing operations or permits for existing leases, the fact that W&T and Talos squirreled away many GOM leases means they can continue to explore and develop and produce for a long time. Future lessors on the other hand are vulnerable to carbon reduction

President Biden signing January 27 climate change executive order. Image from npr.org website. Credited Getty Images March + April 2021

| HEIGHTS | 11


W&T Offshore’s Gulf of Mexico Operations. Image from 2019 Annual Report

regulatory changes. Perhaps more stringent measures related to approval of drilling permits, exploration plans, development plans, oil spill-response submissions and decommissioning plans. Although it’s impossible to know what’s coming, I personally would go to the bookie with this last item. Decommissioning relates to cessation of operations, plugging and abandonment and removal of production facilities and pipelines. Trump loosened up Obama-era financial assurance requirements (bonds) for decommissioning, however Biden mentioned “abandoned wells” three times in the speech he made before signing. He related abandonment to new well-capping jobs, nevertheless his words might be a clue to hardball protocol on decommissioning.

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12 | HEIGHTS | March + April 2021

None of this told me what happened to GOM Lease Sale high bidders whose leases were not yet awarded the day Biden paused leasing. So I contacted BOEM’s Public Affairs office, which sent a link to Biden’s executive order which I already had, and a lame reply, “For Lease Sale 256, all leases not yet awarded will have to go through a review process by higher authority.” Surely the high bids became meaningless. One imagines BOEM’s staff is flummoxed, a new director appeared in February, and the upcoming March GOM Lease Sale 257 got cancelled. Meanwhile acting Secretary de la Vega “reviews” leasing and permitting and presumably entertains stricter carbon capture lease terms and higher royalties. Interior Secretary Bernhardt split January 20, and Interior nominee Deb Haaland, awaits confirmation. President Biden called climate change an existential threat. Transitioning from fossil fuels will create “millions of clean energy jobs in wind, solar and carbon capture.” He predicted a million jobs in the automobile industry alone. Biden pledged to spend $2 trillion to convert to carbon-neutral energy sources. Opponents say the notion that anything but a truly diverse energy portfolio can power up our entire residential, commercial, transportation, and industrial network is half-baked.


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INTOWN

F CUS real estate

Resilient and Optimistic by David Michael Young

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espite an incredibly challenging year for the people of planet Earth, Houston’s economy, and especially our real estate market, have remained amazingly resilient and optimistic. Single-family home sales in 2020 surpassed 2019’s record volume by more than 10 percent, even as the supply of homes withered to the lowest levels of all time.

GREATER HEIGHTS INDEPENDENCE HEIGHTS

COVID helped push our real estate market from several angles. People now spend more time working and schooling from home, so they want more space – a home office, a game room, an outdoor living area, and a pool for the kids. More people and companies are moving to Texas than to any other state except for Florida. Hewlett Packard recently relocated to Houston from Silicon Valley. A strained economy is keeping interest rates at record lows. It all adds up to more home sales. The outlook for home sales in 2021 is favorable as January and February have already proven to be much more active in online traffic and person showings than the last few months of 2020. We could be on track for another record year of home sales.

12 14||HEIGHTS HEIGHTS|| March March++April April2021 2021

river oaks

tanglewood

WEST UNIVERSITY

Photo: TK Images


Val Arbona

REALTOR, CLHMS, CRS

RE/MAX Vintage (713) 562-4903 valarbona.com

David Michael Young Broker Associate, CLHMS, CNE, GREEN

Compass RE Texas

(713) 320-6453 www.youngrealtyhouston.com

Beverly Smith

CLHMS Lake Conroe Specialist

Coldwell Banker Realty

(713) 569-2113 www.lakeconroebeverlysmith.com

Carrie Ousley CIC, CISR

Luxury Home Insurance (281) 224-0762 www.carrieousley.com

10 Magnolia Woods Dr. | Kingwood

13246 Snow Lane | Lake Conroe

Grand 12,708 SF estate on 3.85 acre lot in guard gated Deer Ridge Estates with guest house and pool house. Grounds include huge pool, secluded hot hub, many covered patios, two kitchens, fountains, fire pits, palapas and a walking trail through the woods. David M. Young | Compass RE Texas | 713-320-6453

Lake Conroe Waterfront with approximately 240' of water frontage with a boat slip and a boat ramp. This 4.94 acres is unrestricted with trees and a 1000 square foot cabin with electricity, kitchen and bathroom, 2 bedrooms and a bunk room that sleeps seven. Open water with views from the vista out over the lake and deeper water depths off the bulkhead.' Beverly Smith | Coldwell Banker Realty | 713-569-2113

List Price $3,300,000 | MLS #91653116

List Price 1,075,000 | MLS #91218580


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CLHMS, GRI, ABR, The Woodlands Specialist

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Elegantly updated (2018) Southern traditional in gated Kelliwood Lakes, with majestic trees, serene lake view, pool and 4 car garage. Six bedrooms, including master and second bedroom down. Impressive gourmet kitchen open to living areas with views of back yard. David M. Young | Compass RE Texas | 713-320-6453

List Price $1,295,000 | Coming Soon

List Price $995,500 | MLS #15810960


INTOWN

F CUS

Greater Heights

real estate

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he Heights, a diverse smalltown community “Inside the Loop” was developed in the 1890’s by its founders Oscar Martin Carter and Daniel Denton Cooley who were the principles of the Omaha and South Texas Land Company. These midwestern investors were drawn to the higher elevation of the area and purchased 1,700 acres of land. With electrification, the developers could expand further from downtown Houston with the use of the city’s street car system. The Heights became the city’s first large, planned community and existed separate from Houston until it was annexed in 1918. Today the Heights has much to offer its residents, including one of Houston’s grandest boulevards, home of a 3 mile walking trail, majestic trees and public art sculptures. The Heights architecture ranges from Texas Victorians, turn-of-the-cen-

tury bungalows and new development. Other amenities the Heights offers are exemplary schools, acres of parks, miles of trails, an exploding restaurant scene, live entertainment, antique stores and offbeat boutiques. In recent years, portions of the Heights have been designated as historic, which has preserved the original character of the neighborhood. If you have bought or are thinking of purchasing a home in the Heights then you’ve made a wise decision. In fact, a recent CNN survey ranked the Heights the #4 big city neighborhood in the country. 2020 was a challenging year for everyone but the real estate market in the Heights had a slight increase from 2019 production. Single family homes range from $310,000-1,995,000 with standard lot sizes ranging from 4,400 square feet up to 7,500 square feet. The amount of single- family sales for 2020 was close to 1,400 transactions with an average price per square foot of $250. Townhomes mostly exist on the outer boundaries of the Heights and range from $260,000$650,000. In 2020 there were 144 transactions with a price per square foot of $185. Lots are still in high demand but

Independence Heights

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ouston’s newest “hot spot” for affordable new construction is called Independence Heights. Located North of the Houston Heights, just outside the 610 Loop, “The Super Neighborhood,” was created by the City of Houston, which drew its borders as Tidwell to the North, Shepherd Drive to the West, 610 to the South and 45 to the East. Similar to the Heights, this area is rich with history. It started to develop in 1908 by Wright Land Company and was incorporated Independence Heights. It became the first African American municipality in Texas. Then in 1929, the community was annexed by Houston. In 2018, the Houston Chronicle said this area “has it all” and cited a study conducted by Redfin, who ranked neighborhoods based on what buyers wanted. 18 | HEIGHTS | March + April 2021

by Amanda & Rich Anhorn

year by year there are becoming more scarce in the Heights with prices ranging from $250,000-$1,250,000 with an average price around $60 a square foot. In 2020, there were 56 lots that sold. If you’re in the rental market there is a wide variety to choose from including garage apartments which start around $725 a month to luxury homes up to $8,000 a month. Amanda & Rich Anhorn | Greenwood King Properties | Top Producer 2004-2020 713.255.5123 | anhorn@grenwoodking. com by Jessica McCreary

Priorities were good schools, transit options, commute times, crime, and affordability. Independence Heights ended up ranking 13 out of 25 in their nation-wide study. The recent development of a Whole Foods 365 at 610 & Yale has prompted other businesses, over the last few years,

to take a risk in this “up-and-coming” location. For 2017, the average sales price for a lot was $45,316. In 2020, that jumped to $63,500. Let’s not forget the area’s popularity with Millennials, as well. As of three years ago, they represent the largest cohort of homebuyers in the country, and Houston is no different. The key to their heart is affordability. In the past 6 months, 77 new construction homes were sold, the average price being $301,094 but new homes range anywhere from $247k-475k depending on the builder. In 2019, new construction was going for less than $375k in this area. So the demand in Independence Heights has definitely increased, despite the pandemic-climate we found ourselves in last year. Jessica McCreary is Broker /Owner of HTX Living, LLC. p. 713 408.3185


River Oaks

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iver Oaks is undisputedly Houston’s premier larger subdivision. With a buy-in price of $1 million and previous non-MLS sales in excess of $30 million, this genteel neighborhood is home to many of Houston’s wealthiest families. Established in the 1920s by Houston’s famous Hogg family and anchored by the exclusive River Oaks Country Club, the River Oaks subdivision of roughly 1,300 homes was primarily built out in the 1920s and 1930s. Most of these homes were designed and built by renowned architects and builders, and have been preserved over the years by consecutive owners. The River Oaks Area would also include the subdivisions of Tall Timbers (acreage lots west of Willowick), Homewood (acreage lots on Lazy Ln), Royden Oaks (~10,000 SF lots west of River Oaks), Oak Estates just west of that, Avalon Place (~10,000 SF lots east of River Oaks), and Glendower Court (<6,000 SF lots east of Avalon Place). These deed restricted subdivisions are served well by the high-end retail shops and fine restaurants in Upper Kirby, the River Oaks Shopping Center and Highland Village. Many of the highest priced homes are not listed in MLS, but according to HARMLS, there were 107 sales of single

West University

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Tanglewood

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by David Michael Young

estled just to the west of Rice University, West University Place is one of the most desirable neighborhoods in Houston. Stretching just over 2 miles, West U has managed to retain its small-town feel in the middle of a big city. Developed in 1917, the neighborhood still exhibits some of the original bungalow designs but has also made way for newer constructions. West University has shown some of the strongest appreciation in land value over the past 10 years in the city of Houston. Most commonly known for its street names – resembling universities across the country, the neighborhood has strong

family homes in the River Oaks Area in 2020 ranging $760,000 to $5,100,000 and averaging $2,391,903 ($477/SF) – 12% lower than 2019. There are also 8 luxury high rise condominium towers in the broader River Oaks Area, including The Huntingdon, 2727 Kirby, Regency House, The Willowick, Lamar Tower, Inwood Manor, Chateau Ten and The River Oaks. 29 condos sold in these buildings in 2020, ranging $256,500 to $3,095,000 and averaging $879,081 ($410/SF) – 7% lower than 2019. David Michael Young, Broker Associate Compass RE Texas david@youngrealtyhouston.com 713-320-6453

by Patricia Tello

anglewood remains one of Houston’s most sought after and affluent neighborhoods. It is home to the Houston Country Club and the Tanglewood Road Promenade. The Tanglewood subdivision is surrounded with restaurants, education opportunities, entertainment venues, shopping and more. See below for more information on the surrounding resources for the Tanglewood subdivision. Tanglewood Real Estate Overview: • Currently there are 51 homes for sale in Tanglewood. • The average price of the homes for sale in Tanglewood is $ 3,247,470. • The average square feet of the homes in Tanglewood is 5,125 sqft. • There are currently 8 homes for lease in Tanglewood subdivision. • The average rent in Tanglewood is $11,406 at an average price of 2 per square foot. Tanglewood has 1,203 single family properties with 5,125 Median Square Feet. The median year built is 1978. The home values ranges between $980 - $3280 K and you can view the square feed price change data since 1998. The median sold price/sqft is $362.46 while the median appraised value is $ 361.45/ sqft. Patricia Tello, Realtor® Uptown Real Estate Group, Inc by KW + 281-814-8538 Mobile USA + 56 9 66617884 Mobile Chile by Caroline Bean

educational ties. This makes the “Neighborhood City” an ideal spot for living, working and raising a family. The community manages neighborhood parks, pools, recreation center, library, and much more. No wonder West University has been named one of the best neighborhoods in Houston! 77005 Stats (Per MLS) • Jan 1-February 28, 2020 20 Single Family Homes Sold Average Sales Price: $1,734,291 Average SF: 4,141 Average Lot SF: 7,946

1 Lot Sold Average Sales Price: $675,000 Average Lot SF: 6,000 • Jan 1 - March 1, 2021 24 Single Family Home Sold Average Sales Price: $1,572,912 Average SF: 3,928 Average Lot SF: 6,456 2 Lots Sold Average Sales Price: 757,500 Average Lot Size: 5,550 Caroline Bean is a Broker Associate & Top Producer with Compass Real Estate P: 713-206-4114

For full Real Estate report, go to houstonintown.com March + April 2021

| HEIGHTS | 19


Intown’s Classical Music Critic, the Hon. Philip Berquist Honorary Consul of the Republic of Croatia for Texas

Classical Music Update

I

International Star Conductor to Lead

opened an email from the Houston Symphony Orchestra recently and was very pleasantly surprised. Despite the limitations that we are all so well aware of as a result of COVID-19, HSO is bringing in a major international talent to be guest conductor for a series of concerts at the end of March, 2021. Esa-Pekka Salonen is that star conductor. In my opinion this is the first guest conductor of that status in many seasons. Salonen, from Finland, has enjoyed a very successful career, both as conductor and composer. Now in his first year as Music Director of the San Francisco Symphony, he also is Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor of the Philharmonia Orchestra in London. He is also Conductor Laureate of the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, which he led from 1992 until 2009. In March, 2019 I got to hear him in person conducting the Philharmonia in New York at the David Geffen Hall, formerly known as Avery Fisher Hall. It was a mixed program, beginning with Oceanides by the Finnish master, Jean Sibelius, Salonen’s own Cello Concerto and Anton Bruckner’s majestic Symphony 7. It was a wonderful experience. By the way, what is there about Finland? It is a country with a population of 5.5 million, about the size of Harris County. It has produced not only Jean Sibelius, perhaps my favorite composer, but also Einojuhani Rautavaara. Notable conductors include Leif Segerstam, Pavo Berglund, Osmo Vanskä, Magnus Lindberg, Susanna Mälkki, and Julia-Pekanbaru Sarasate among many others. An article about Segerstam (also a composer with over 350 symphonies) will be featured in INTOWN later this year. Finland also has produced some of the greatest bass opera singers of our time such as Martii Tavella, and Matti Salminen, two of the greatest Wagnerian basses ever. Let’s not forget Formula One driving champions, Keke Rosberg, Mika Häkkinen, Kimi Räikkönen (Rosberg’s son, Nico, was born in Germany but holds dual citizenship and also won the F1 championship recently), and Vattali Bottas. Finland is simply an amazing country with a very diverse and talented populous. Back to Salonen. He was born in Finland in 1958. A talented horn player, he went on the study conducting with Jorma Panula. Some of his classmates include Vänka, Sarasate and Lindberg, each mentioned above. His list of recording with major orchestras from around the world is immense. One of my favorite recording of his, with the LA Phil, is Bernard Herrmann - The Film Scores for several Alfred Hitch20 | HEIGHTS | March + April 2021

cock collaborations such as “Vertigo,” “Psycho,” and “North by Northwest,” “Taxi Driver” and several others. I requested the opportunity to interview Salonen for INTOWN Magazine but, regretfully, his contract with HSO specifically does not allow them. Alas. With Maestro Salonen on the podium, the program is especially varied featuring Bach, Salonen himself and Beethoven. The first three Bach selections are particularly interesting, as they are transcriptions by twentieth century masters in their own right, conductor Otto Klemperer, and composers Anton Webern and Luciano Berio. As to his composition, FOG, it was written as a 90th birthday tribute to famed architect Frank Gehry. It is a ten minute fantasy based on the Bach E major Prelude from Partita in E, written in 2019. Among


Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductor Yoonshin Song, violin Bach-Klemperer: Bist du bei mir Bach-Webern: Ricercata a 6 voci Bach-Berio: Contrapunctus XIX Bach: Prelude for Violin Partita No. 3 in E major Salonen: FOG Beethoven: Symphony No. 1 For ticket information: (888) 684-3582

Gehry’s notable creations is the Walt Disney Concert Hall, home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic in LA. The concert information for the Houston Symphony Orchestra is as follows: • Friday, 26 March, at 8:00 p.m. • Saturday, 27 March, at 8:00 p.m. (Livestreamed at 8:00p.m.) • Sunday, 28 March, at 2:30 p.m.

The Desert Island Question Now, let’s have some fun. There is an age-old question for music lovers - if you were stranded on a desert island (and had electricity and a CD player or phonograph) what ten albums would you feel that you could not live without? For this issue, I propose that we stick to classical music. Please email me with your suggestions listing the composer, chosen work, conductor and orchestra. For example, Beethoven, Carlos Kleiber, Vienna Philharmonic (this may very well be on my list!). In the next issue of INTOWN Magazine, I will publish the most interesting selections from our readers and also my personal list. In future months, the categories of jazz, pop and “etc.” will be asked for. Please submit your “Top Ten Classical Recordings for My Desert Island” via email to: classicalmusicberquist@gmail.com I look forward to hearing from you!

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FOCUS Money Lessons

FINANCIAL

By Evans Attwell Senior Vice President, Frost Bank

Teaching kids about money

I

f you are a parent or grandparent, it may give you pause to know that research shows children tend to copy their parents’ habits and attitudes about money. Are you passing on good money skills to the children in your life?

Although many parents are diligent about teaching safety and good manners, too often money skills are a blind spot. To be sure, in some families, money is an uncomfortable, even taboo, topic. Many other parents simply don’t talk about money with their children because they don’t know where to start or they expect their children’s school to do the job. Still, what parents say and do is the single biggest influence on their how their children will deal with money. So, how do you help your children become financially savvy, responsible and eventually capable of being independent? For starters, say the experts, unlike a birds-and-bees or don’t-do-drugs talk, money skills must be methodically taught to kids, experienced hands-on and modeled daily by parents.

money lessons early—as soon as your child can count—is important. But, say early childhood experts, treating your young child like a miniature adult is a mistake. To make an impression that sticks, you’ll want to find fun, meaningful and age appropriate ways to start and expand your child’s money education. As just one example for preschoolers, you might work the idea of money into their imaginary games, such as playing pretend restaurant or pretend shopping.

Show them the way

Because you are your children’s most influential teacher, your actions Some research suggests that lifetime have the most power to help or hurt. money habits are set by the age of sev- Remember that children tend to mimic en, and assuming that is true, starting what you do even more than what you

Start early

22 | HEIGHTS | March + April 2021

Evans Attwell Senior Vice President Frost Bank


Would you like to talk to a financial professional? say, and they are always watching and learning, even when your actions don’t match your words.

Allow them to make mistakes

Although it’s important to give your children advice and guidance, it’s equally important to allow them to make some of their own decisions about money—good and bad. Even by taking responsibility for small amounts of real money, children learn powerful lessons from personal experience, perhaps even more from mistakes. Need a little coaching of your own? Look for resources online and in print that offer creative, age-appropriate ideas for teaching money skills to children.

Contact Evans at 713.388.1367 or evans.attwell@frostbank.com. Investment and insurance products are not FDIC insured, are not bank guaranteed, and may lose value. Brokerage services offered through Frost Brokerage Services, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC, and investment advisory services offered through Frost Investment Services, LLC, a registered investment adviser. Both companies are subsidiaries of Frost Bank. Investment management services, financial planning and trust services are offered through Frost Wealth Advisors of Frost Bank. Additionally, insurance products are offered through Frost Insurance. Deposit and loan products are offered through Frost Bank, Member FDIC. Frost does not provide legal or tax advice. Please seek legal or tax advice from legal and/ or tax professionals.

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