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Don't panic at the title. George Strait isn't hanging it up, but the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, where Strait has been playing forever, is leaving the Astrodome, making this his last gig at the old venue. Ironically, it's Strait's first live album, and this most consistent of New Traditionalists makes it every bit as memorable as the best of his 29 studio recordings. The 16-song repertoire is fertile greatest-hits territory, its songs exploring pretty much all the aspects of the human condition. "The Fireman" and "Write This Down" serve up Strait's droll wit in service to humorous takes on love and life, while the exquisite "Amarillo by Morning" and "The Cowboy Rides Away" offer melancholy reflections on longing, loneliness, and the solitary man. The gently rocking "She'll Leave You with a Smile" lays on the heartbreak a faithless lover left behind, and the beautiful country ballad "Love Without End, Amen" celebrates the enduring force that bonds fathers and progeny. For good measure, Strait serves up a feisty rendition of Larry Cordle's scorching of contemporary country's misguided ethos in "Murder on Music Row," then tips his hat to fellow Texas music giant Bob Wills with a rousing, fiddle-fired version of his western swing classic "Take Me Back to Tulsa." President George W. Bush makes an audio appearance, too, presenting Strait with some kind of award, and in doing so pretty much says it all, to wit: "George, well done, sir." David McGee, Barnes & Noble