Growing Roots

A hockey-playing high-tech locksmith by day, Chris Gardner has the key to the Americana music charts.

Jhane Hoang
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Chris Gardner may be the most popular musician in Houston that you’ve never heard of, but that is about to change. Earlier this year, his third album, Hanging on the Line, rose to No. 8 on Roots Music Report’s Americana music chart, and the single, “A Lot More Than a Little” charted for 26 weeks, hitting No. 1. But you’re not likely to hear it on commercial radio: Roots tracks radio play on some 500 independent stations around the world; in Houston, that translates to KPFT. 

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Reel Talk

Shea Serrano has tackled the music and sports worlds, and in his latest offering, praises Hollywood’s unsung heroes.

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Shea Serrano is, first and foremost, a fan. His first book, Bun B’s Rap Coloring and Activity Book, was a tongue-in-cheek homage to Houston’s most famous rapper. This was followed by The Rap Year Book and Basketball (and Other Things), where he took on hip-hop and hoops, respectively. Both were New York Times best-sellers. 

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Art+Culture

Turning the Page

Houston-based Brit Michael Zilkha is a record-industry veteran and renewable-energy tycoon. His next project? An edgy little publishing house.

Phoebe Rourke

Michael Zilkha, U.K.-born and Oxford-educated, has been an entrepreneur his entire life. In New York in the early 1980s, he was known as the super-hip co-founder of ZE Records, described by Spin magazine as the “no-wave-dance-punk-salsa-whatever label,” and home to Kid Creole and the Coconuts among others. He closed down the label after just five years, in part, he says, because, “I didn’t want to get to the point where I was twice as old as the artists.” A visionary, he got into renewable energy early, a move that brought him to Houston, where’s he’s been a fixture on the philanthropic social scene supporting organizations such as Inprint and the MFAH. (That was his voice narrating the audio tour section on Vivienne Westwood, punk rock and the Sex Pistols at this summer’s Icons of Style exhibit.) Now, at 65, he’s jumping back into the arts, launching ZE Books, a boutique book publishing company, which has its first title, Intelligence for Dummies by Glenn O’Brien, available this month.

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Art+Culture