'My heart is broken' : Rapper Drake speaks up on Astroworld festival tragedy

"I've spent the past few days trying to wrap my head around this devastating tragedy... My heart is broken for the families and friends of those who lost their lives and for anyone suffering," Drake wrote on his Instagram expressing his grief. 

Rapper Drake finally issued a public statement on Tuesday for the first time over the heartbreaking Astroworld festival tragedy in Houston on November 5 that led to the death of eight people.

"I've spent the past few days trying to wrap my head around this devastating tragedy... My heart is broken for the families and friends of those who lost their lives and for anyone suffering," Drake wrote on his Instagram expressing his grief. 

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He was a surprise guest for the Astroworld event and had also joined Travis on stage for two tracks. This included the well-known 2018 smash "Sicko Mode" track by the duo.  

Drake had also received flak from the public for continuing with the show while the events led to mass panic and casualty on Friday.

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As he took the stage towards the end of the set, emergency medical personnel were reportedly responding to multiple cases of cardiac arrest, likely from the surge of the crowd as they made their way towards the stage for Scott's and Drake's performance.

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The concert drew 50,000 people to Houston's NRG Park, where performers included SZA, Lil Baby and Roddy Ricch, among others, but while billed as a two stage event, Astroworld veered from the usual festival protocol of staggering performances on opposite stages, as Scott was the only headliner on the so-called "Chills" stage.

As Variety previously reported, the combination of Scott's chosen set time and a countdown clock may have contributed to the frenzy and confusion as throngs of fans eager to catch his set ran from one end of the grounds to another.

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Scott's stage banter, encouraging all in attendance to "rage" and make the ground shake, along with the Drake cameo, seemingly amplified the already energized crowd to the point where people were being shoved, trampled and otherwise injured.

The fateful decision, however, was in having Scott scheduled to go on 45 minutes after SZA's performance wrapped, as opposed to overlapping slightly with her set or even beginning just as it ended at 8 p.m.

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It's what live music professionals call "spreading the field," and it's a key facet of crowd control at a large-scale event like a music festival.

Those who died at Astroworld ranged in age from 14 to 27. A 10-year-old is currently hospitalised in Houston after sustaining life-threatening injuries from trampling.

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He is currently in a medically-induced coma, in an attempt to combat his brain trauma, and his family has retained attorney Ben Crump, who represented George Floyd's family in the wake of his murder at the hands of Minneapolis police.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by champagnepapi (@champagnepapi)

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