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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/george_strait_crop_9008.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:The King.]]
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4'''George Harvey Strait''' (born May 18, 1952 in Poteet, Texas) is a popular {{country music}} performer, sometimes known by the FanNickname "King George." He holds the record for the most #1 hits by ''any'' artist (44 on ''Billboard'' Hot Country Songs, 60 on all major country music charts), and all but two of his twenty-six studio albums have sold platinum or higher, putting him second to only Music/ElvisPresley for the highest-certified male artist in any genre.
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6Strait is also known for his remarkable consistency: almost all of his albums have generally been released to positive reviews, and from 1992 to 2015, he has worked with the same producer and largely the same session musicians. He's even been on the same label, Creator/{{MCA}}, since 1981.
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8He would probably be TheAce of country music if not for his easygoing, everyman demeanor. Since 1981, he has always been a cleancut guy in a cowboy hat and pressed shirt, and has been heralded as one of several musicians who brought country music back to a more traditional sound following the crossover-happiness of the late seventies-early eighties. He certainly has the cred for no-frills, neotraditional country, as before he made it big, he played in various gigs in his native Texas with his Ace in the Hole band.
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10Strait's music is also known for its relative lack of gimmickry: he almost never records duets, novelties, or sappy love ballads ("I Cross My Heart" notwithstanding). On the flip side, he has almost always relied on outside material, with his 2009 single "Living for the Night" being the first single of his career that he has had a hand in writing. Furthermore, he is known for rarely recording music videos.
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12In 1992, Strait made a brief foray into acting, starring in the film ''Film/PureCountry'', in addition to recording its soundtrack. While the soundtrack produced two #1 hits for him and is his best-selling album, the film was not very-well received by critics.
13
14----
15!!Tropes present in his work:
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17* AgeProgressionSong:"The Best Day" follows the son at age 7, 15 and a young adult.
18* TheAlcoholic: The subject of "Drinkin' Man" is one who obviously wants to change his ways, but keeps falling back.
19* ArtifactTitle: ''50 Number Ones'' (2004) contained all 50 of his #1 hits to date, plus the new song "I Hate Everything" as a 51st track. Said song was released as a single... and it went to #1 as well, thus invalidating the album's title in mere months!
20* AutoTune:
21** Used for stylistic purposes in his version of "Stars on the Water".
22** Also used to great extent in "It Just Comes Natural"; he clearly misses the note on "Tumbleweeds roll" and not even the Auto-Tune fixes it.
23** Then it's taken up to eleven on the entirety of the live album that was recorded at his final regular concert.
24* BirthDeathJuxtaposition:
25** In "The Breath You Take", the narrator's father dies as the narrator's son is born.
26** In "She Took The Wind From His Sails", the woman's death coincides with her daughter's birth.
27* BlatantLies: Used in "Ocean Front Property". In the verses, he says that he doesn't love her, but adds, "now if you'll buy that / I've got some ocean front property in Arizona..."
28* BrokenWinLossStreak: As he's a long runner, he's had this happen several times:
29** 1989's "Overnight Success" broke an 11-song streak of #1 hits that dated to 1986 and spanned four albums.
30** His 1992 cover of Music/HankWilliams' "Lovesick Blues" was his first single not to make Top 20.
31** 2012's "Drinkin' Man" became his first single not to make Top 30…
32** …and only a year later, "I Believe" became his first single to miss the top ''40'' entirely.
33** ...[[FromBadToWorse and a year after that]], "Let It Go" became his worst-performing ''lead single'' ever.
34* ChildhoodFriendRomance: The subject of the song "Check Yes or No", which is about childhood sweethearts who go on to get married and have a family.
35-->''It started way back in third grade\
36I used to sit beside Emmylou Hayes...''
37* ChronologicalAlbumTitle: ''#7''.
38* DeadSparks: "I Know She Still Loves Me":
39-->There's just a hint of indifference\
40In her lack of conversation when we talk\
41And the subject matters change\
42There's no mention of our future now at all\
43She still kisses me each morning\
44But it seems more like a habit than before\
45I know she still loves me\
46But I don't think she likes me anymore.
47* {{Determinator}}: MCA was determined, come hell or high water, to make "Give It All We Got Tonight" his 60th #1 while he was still 60. They ''barely'' pulled it off, and only on the easier-to-manipulate ''Mediabase'' charts.
48* DualMeaningChorus: Occurs in "Love Without End, Amen," where the chorus' line "Let me tell you a secret about a father's love" applies to three situations: singer's father to singer, singer to his son, and Jesus to the singer.
49** Also used in "The Best Day", as seen above.
50* TheExile: "All My Ex's Live in Texas", and that's why I hang my hat in Tennessee.
51* GratuitousSpanish: His cover of José Alfredo Jiménez' mariachi song "El Rey", which he sings entirely ''en español''.
52* HeavyMeta: "Twang" is but one example.
53* IconicOutfit: He usually wears a cowboy hat, pressed shirt, belt buckle, jeans, and cowboy boots.
54* InnocentBlueEyes: "Baby Blue," in which baby blue is both the color of his lost love's eyes and the color of the sky when she left him.
55-->''Baby blue was the color of her eyes''
56-->''Baby blue like the Colorado skies''
57-->''Like a breath of spring, she came and went, and I still don't know why, so''
58-->''Here's to you and whoever holds my baby blue tonight''
59* LampshadedDoubleEntendre: The Cajun-flavored "Adalida" has this gem: "The way that you're lookin', you got me a-cookin' / And I ain't talkin' 'bout étouffée".
60* LyricalDissonance:
61** "Cowboys Like Us" is a song about getting out on the road with his buddies and riding their motorcycles to Mexico. You'd expect at least ''some'' tempo, but instead it's a slow, soft, gentle waltz.
62** "Heartland": A song about traditional country values...done up like a glitzy stadium country-rock piece. Of course, this was the intent, as it's the first song you hear in the movie ''Pure Country'', to see just how out of touch the main character is from his roots.
63* NeverBareheaded: He always wears a cowboy hat onstage and for publicity appearances, although unlike some other hat-wearing artists, he still has a full head of hair.
64* {{Pun}}: "I have so many ex's and owe (X's and O) so much, I oughta be on ''[[Series/TheHollywoodSquares Hollywood Squares]]''."
65* PersonaNonGrata: "All My Ex's Live in Texas", the narrator's ex-girlfriends all live in Texas, forcing him to live in Tennessee.
66* PuppyLove: The couple in "Check Yes or No" met in third grade, where they kissed on the bus and got caught passing he titular note ("Do you love me?... Check yes or no.").
67* RecordProducer: From the ''Pure Country'' soundtrack through ''Love Is Everything'' in 2013, Strait was produced exclusively by Tony Brown.
68* RedBaron: "They call me the Fireman / That's my name / Makin' my rounds all over town / Puttin' out old flames..."
69* RhymingWithItself: "The Chair" rhymes "at all" and "after all".
70* SelfTitledAlbum: Some of his early albums' names were [[HurricaneOfPuns puns]] on his name, such as ''Strait from the Heart''. He later released a truly self-titled album in 2001.
71* SexinessScore: The subject girl from "Her Only Bad Habit Is Me" is HeadTurningBeauty described as a "10".
72-->She's perfection, she's a ten
73-->My baby never looks at other men
74* ShoutOut: When George Strait asked the writers of "Blue Clear Sky" as to why the title wasn't the more common "Clear Blue Sky", they told him it was a deliberate reference to ''Film/ForrestGump''.
75** Strait is a common name-drop in country songs, including "Ain't Going Down ('Til the Sun Comes Up)" by Music/GarthBrooks, "On a Good Night" by Wade Hayes, "Cowboy Love" by Music/JohnMichaelMontgomery, "Girl in a Country Song" by Music/MaddieAndTae, and "Did It for the Girl" by Greg Bates (which goes a step further by also name-dropping his song "Marina del Rey"). The frequent name dropping of Strait has reached a parity only achieved by Music/MerleHaggard, Music/GeorgeJones and [[Music/HankWilliams Hank Williams Sr.]]
76** In the music video for "Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses", Music/KathyMattea wears a George Strait shirt.
77** Strait name-drops the aforementioned Haggard and Jones, as well as Music/WillieNelson, Music/JohnnyCash and Music/KrisKristofferson in "Kicked Outta Country".
78* SignatureStyle: He's always been known for a charming, straightforward, everyman style with few flourishes or gimmicks.
79* SingleStanzaSong: "Heartland" and "I Know She Still Loves Me"
80* SingleWomanSeeksGoodMan: “How ‘Bout Them Cowgirls” describes cowgirls as tough, proud, and feeling out of place in the world; and how a man will win her over if they allow her space and the freedom to be herself.
81* {{Spoonerism}}: In "The Chair":
82-->''Well, thank you, could I drink you a buy''
83-->''Oh listen to me — What I mean is, can I buy you a drink?''
84* TakeThat: "Kicked Outta Country" as a whole, to country music radio. Oddly, his followup album, ''Honky Tonk Time Machine'', was his most well-received album in years despite not relenting, a promise he made in the aforementioned song:
85-->''Well it don't really matter, 'cause I ain't gonna change''
86-->''So gettin' kicked outta country won't hurt a thing''
87* TitleOnlyChorus: "Love's Gonna Make It Alright."
88* ThisIsMyChair: Subverted in "The Chair." The singer tells a woman in a local bar she's sitting in his chair. She asks if the one next to it is taken (it's not), which leads to a conversation. At the end, the singer reveals it wasn't his chair after all, he just wanted an excuse to come over and talk to her.
89* TruckDriversGearChange: "Meanwhile" shifts at the chorus, going from D Major to F Major, then back down. The last chorus goes up again to G, but the song ends on an E chord.
90* WentCrazyWhenTheyLeft: Subverted in "She Let Herself Go". The woman's lover has left her life, so instead of ''going'' crazy, she's now ''going'' to places that he wouldn't let her (such as a singles cruise, a spa, and Hawaii).

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