Fun-filled but chaotic Travis Scott concerts have long strayed close to the edge
Los Angeles: Travis Scottâs high-energy performances are known for being chaotic and fun-filled shows with concertgoers encouraged to take part in a raucous nature involving mosh pits, crowd surfing and stage diving.
Welcome to Scottâs Astroworld Festival â" where concertgoers can become their rebellious selves.
Travis Scott performs at his Astroworld Music Festival, Houston, where authorities are now investigating how eight people in the crowd were crushed to death.Credit:AP
Tragically, the Grammy-nominated rapperâs energetic show this time turned deadly after at least eight people â" between the ages of 14 and 27 â" were killed during a crowd surge at his music festival in Houston on Friday evening. Dozens were injured, and 13 remain in hospital after a sizable group of the 50,000 in attendance pushed toward the stage at NRG Park as a timer clicked down to start the performance.
Authorities said they would watch video, interview witnesses and review concert protocols to determine what caused the fatal crush.
âAs soon as he jumped out on the stage, it was like an energy took over and everything went haywire,â concertgoer Niaara Goods said. âAll of a sudden, your ribs are being crushed. You have someoneâs arm in your neck. Youâre trying to breathe, but you canât.â
Goods said she was so desperate to get out that she bit a man on the shoulder to get him to move.
Excitement turned to tragedy as the crowd of 50,000 watched Scott perform.Credit:AP
Houston mayor Sylvester Turner called the disaster âa tragedy on many different levelsâ and said it was too early to draw conclusions about what went wrong.
âIt may well be that this tragedy is the result of unpredictable events, of circumstances coming together that couldnât possibly have been avoided,â said Judge Lina Hidalgo, Harris Countyâs top elected official. âBut until we determine that, I will ask the tough questions.â
People in the crowd reported lots of pushing and shoving during the performances leading up to Scottâs set â" which is normal at his shows. Heâs often encouraged fans to bypass security and rush the stage, but none of those previous situations resulted in fatalities.
âTravis Scottâs whole aesthetic is about rebellion,â said HipHopDX editor-in-chief Trent Clark, who has attended several of his performances. âThe shows have a lot of raging. With the death of punk rock, hip-hop has indeed adopted and patterned the new generation of mosh pits. Itâs not uncommon to see a lot of crowding and raging or complete wild behaviour at a Travis Scott show.â
Scott is an eight-time Grammy-nominated rapper who is musicâs biggest young stars. The Houston-born musician founded his festival in 2018 on the heels of his chart-topping album Astroworld, which was led by the infectious song Sicko Mode. He also has a three-year-old daughter with Kylie Jenner, who announced in September that she is pregnant with their second child.
âTravis Scott is legendary in the hip-hop community for his beyond high-energy performances, where he really tries to rile up the crowd,â said Noah Shachtman, editor-in-chief at Rolling Stone. âThat makes for some really fun shows and made for a couple of scary incidents.â
In a tweet posted on Saturday, Scott said he was âabsolutely devastated by what took place last night.â He pledged to work âtogether with the Houston community to heal and support the families in need.â
No matter where the investigation ultimately leads, tragedies like the one at the Astroworld Festival have been happening for a long time. In 1979, 11 people died in a scramble to enter a Cincinnati, Ohio, concert by The Who. At a soccer stadium in England, a human crush in 1989 led to nearly 100 deaths. In 2015, a collision of two crowds at the hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia caused more than 2400 deaths, based on an Associated Press count of media reports and officialsâ comments.
But with Scott getting into trouble before for the two past shows, Shachtman thinks the rapper will get a âhard second lookâ.
In 2017, Scott was arrested after he encouraged fans to bypass security and rush the stage, leaving a security guard, a police officer and several other injured during a concert in Arkansas. In a separate incident, he was sentenced to one year of court supervision after pleading guilty to reckless conduct charges stemming from a 2015 incident in Chicago at the Lollapalooza music festival.
At the time, Chicago officials said Scott encouraged fans to vault security barricades. However, no one was injured.
âIn terms of energy, he wants the energy heâs giving out on stage to be reciprocated from the audience, almost in defiance,â said Julian Kimble, who wrote a concert review on Scottâs 2018 Astroworld performance for the Washington Post. He called the rapper one of the most electrifying performers heâs seen.
âIâve seen him tell people like âDonât listen to security. Forget security. This is for yâall. This is for the fans,ââ he continued. âWith regards to last night, thatâs an example of how things can go wrong. Thereâs a lot of negligence across the board. I donât think thereâs one bad guy or culprit. Itâs a sweeping structural failure with what happened.â
Shachtman said he hopes the tragedy will help tweak Scottâs approach toward his show. He enjoys the rapperâs performances but wants a safer atmosphere where people can still have fun â" especially for those eager to find some enjoyment at live shows during the pandemic.
âI would expect that theyâll be increased measures to make sure concertgoers can have a great time, but do so without getting killed,â said Shachtman, who grew up on New York hardcore punk rock music. He said that heâs no stranger to mosh pits, but he adds that âthereâs a big difference between a mosh pit, even a giant one, and a life-threating situation.â
Scott is scheduled headliner for the Day N Vegas Festival next weekend. But any performance involving Scott could come under some scrutiny for crowd control measures and other safety concerns.
âConcert promoters pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for security at both private and public [events],â Shachtman said. âThatâs got to be deployed properly. Or else, weâre going to see another one of these incidents.â
AP
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