Travis Scott is being sued over the cancellation of a music festival.

Travis Scott

Travis Scott

The 'Astroworld' rapper has been accused of fraud and breach of contract by Empire Music Ventures, who allege he had agreed to perform at the 2019 Rhythm, Wine & Brews Experience at the Empire Polo Grounds - the same site as Coachella - but after he signed a deal on November 7 and received an upfront part-payment of $217,500 on December 3, his representatives called and cancelled his 75-minute set with no explanation.

On the day the organisers claim to have paid Travis the first installment of his $400,000 fee, they released a message cancelling the event which read: "Due to a last minute cancellation by our festival headliner, we have no other choice than to cancel the 2019 Rhythm, Wine & Brews Experience."

In court documents obtained by The Blast, Empire Music Ventures accused the 26-year-old star and his team of stealing from them.

They wrote in bold and underlined text: "Defendants have stolen Plaintiff's money. [They] refuse to return the money ... each of them have kept it, and wrongfully converted it to their own use. They have stolen 217,500.00."

While no explanation has been given for Travis dropping out of the festival, the contract states that he could not "contract or advertise any other performance within a 120-mile radius for 90 days before or 30 days after March 2", meaning any possible surprise performance at Coachella could be severely limited.

Travis famously met Kylie Jenner - the mother of his daughter Stormi, 10 months, at Coachella, and after sparking an instant connection, the lip kit guru decided to head off on tour with the rapper to really get to know him.

She previously said: "We had a lot of downtime. It was organic. And we would just go to these random cities. We got to not be who we really were. Like, if we were in LA, I feel like it would've been way different. Everything happened for a reason. We weren't going out as 'Kylie and Trav.' We would just be in Cleveland, walking the street for hours. We would go on walks, and no one would bother us."


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