In the dwindling months of summer 2014, Travis Scott’s obsession with curation began to take shape in the public eye. A few days before his mixtape Days Before Rodeo (a teaser for his official debut, Rodeo) hit SoundCloud on August 18, Metro Boomin posted a behind-the-scenes video chronicling the making of Travis and Young Thug’s song “Skyfall.” Between frenetic camera cuts, you’re treated to shots of Travis and Metro piecing together “Skyfall” as smoke billows in the background. Scott bounces between playful exuberance and meticulous micromanagement, imploring engineer Alex Tumay to remove drums and adjust bass levels, all under the watchful eye of the camera.
It’s not unreasonable to think of Days Before Rodeo as the linchpin for Travis Scott’s massive success. He wanted to be a star; if his next move had been a misfire, he might have had to settle for a spot in the middle of the pack. The 10-year anniversary deluxe edition of Days Before Rodeo, available on streaming and vinyl for the first time in a decade with a slew of new tracks, is a time capsule of Scott’s chameleonic production prowess and his budding curatorial skill, even as it begins to reveal the penchant for vapid spectacle that would lead him astray.
By the time Scott’s buzzy 2013 debut mixtape Owl Pharaoh arrived, his career felt as though it just needed one final push to get over the hump. He’d already secured co-signs from Kanye West and T.I., earning touted placements as an in-house producer for G.O.O.D. Music (credits on Yeezus’ “Guilt Trip” and “New Slaves,” with lingering speculation that Scott was a catalyst behind the album’s angsty tonal shift). He lent his talents to Jay-Z’s Magna Carta, Holy Grail and Wale’s The Gifted. By virtue of association, Scott had strapped on the proverbial jetpack.
Those simmering expectations boil over on the growled refrain of Days Before Rodeo opener “The Prayer”: “I might fuck ’round lose my mind, I gotta break out,” he raps, making the act of saying grace sound more like a warning shot. Compared to later releases, Days Before Rodeo is an exercise in restraint, lacking an extensive list of lyrical features (but full of production assists from FKi 1st, Metro Boomin, and Lex Luger). Still, the tape hits clear highs when Scott rolls out the red carpet for more capable rappers. The marriage between blistering hi-hats and spaghetti Western samples make “Mamacita” feel as though Young Thug and the late Rich Homie Quan are gallivanting through a gunfight at the O.K. Corral, with Scott trailing behind. “Skyfall” sets up a brilliant contrast between Scott’s baritone hums and Thug’s piercing raps, coming off as a slow march to desolation accompanied by play-by-play from vengeful spirits.