When Don Trip and Starlito dropped the first Stepbrothers mixtape in 2011, they carved out a rare lane in Hip-Hop: a duo built not just on beats and bars but true brotherhood. Now, nearly 15 years later, the Southern spitters return with Step Brothers 4 Life, proving that consistency and chemistry still count in a game built on trends. Their latest project is out and AllHipHop sat down with the pair to discuss the long journey, how Tennessee shaped their sound and why their bond still runs deeper than rap.
What follows is a hilarious, insightful and sometimes deep dive into everything from PlayStation versus promotion to firearm philosophy. With these two, realness comes first. Watch the video for the full, unedited conversation.
AllHipHop: Y’all are running at a high level creatively, but you said you were “hanging on by a thread.” What’s going on?
Don Trip: I ain’t have my nap. That’s all it is.
Starlito: We’re in grind mode. The album’s done. Now it’s about presentation and marketing—travel, little sleep, and no naps.
AllHipHop: So let’s talk Step Brothers 4 Life. Why the long gap?
Starlito: Life. It’s been eight years since Stepbrothers 3, but when we finally locked in, it only took six weeks. We had six studio sessions and came out with 16 tracks.
Don Trip: We always record these in person. We don’t do the phoned-in thing. That’s our secret sauce.
AllHipHop: You can hear that connection. Most people can’t even rehearse together, let alone build like that.
Starlito: A lot of groups grow apart. But we grew closer—weddings, funerals, kids’ birthdays—we’ve been there for each other in life, not just rap.
Don Trip: There’s no ego between us. No big “I’s” or little “u’s.” We move like a team.
AllHipHop: Who was the first Tennessee rapper that influenced y’all?
Don Trip: For me, it was Three 6 Mafia, Playa Fly, Gangsta Blac—all at once. I grew up hearing them together.
Starlito: A rapper named La Mike. He was from East Nashville, got his haircut at my cousin’s shop. That’s when I realized, “Oh, someone from around here is a rapper.”
AllHipHop: People don’t realize how far Nashville and Memphis are from each other.
Don Trip: It’s three and a half hours. We ain’t neighbors.
Starlito: Memphis is more of a Hip-Hop hotbed. Nashville’s country music business. I went to Tennessee State and that helped me build bridges. But yeah, outsiders assume we’re from the same place.
AllHipHop: We’ve talked about maturity. Hip-Hop’s over 50. Where do y’all think it’s headed?
Don Trip: I don’t think gatekeeping matters anymore. Now, anyone can upload music. That’s good and bad, but it’s easier for real artists to find a lane.
Starlito: We have to own our influence. Hip-Hop’s getting fused with country, pop—you name it. And the stuff with a message is disappearing. It’s on us to tell real stories and preserve the culture.
Don Trip: Substance outlasts trend. We’re focused on giving people music that speaks to something real, not just chasing what’s hot.
AllHipHop: How do y’all feel about the marketing side of things—videos, social media?
Don Trip: It’s like maintaining a house. You want the house, you gotta fix the roof. You want the career, you gotta do the work.
Starlito: Marketing is storytelling. If I can get 3 minutes of your time, maybe I can get you to listen to 51 minutes. We’ve had to do everyone’s job at some point—PR, camera, engineering—you name it.
AllHipHop: Do y’all go back and listen to the old Stepbrothers tapes?
Don Trip: Not really. I don’t even look at old pictures. I don’t want to get stuck in the past. My glory days are ahead of me.
Starlito: Too much reflection can hold you back. You start comparing numbers, chasing old sounds. That’s a trap. We’re building forward.

AllHipHop: Let’s lighten it up. Top 5 Hip-Hop duos?
Don Trip: Kriss Kross, Ball & G, Clipse, CNN and I’ll say me and ‘Lito.
Starlito: UGK, Outkast, Run-DMC, Boosie and Webbie, and yeah—me and Trip.
AllHipHop: Y’all included yourselves?
Starlito: Why not? The chemistry is real. We’re in that conversation.
AllHipHop: Final random topic: guns. Don, you got a favorite?
Don Trip: I got like 200. It’s therapeutic. Like painting. Hitting the same hole in a target 30 times? That’s art.
AllHipHop: So it’s a creative thing?
Don Trip: Yeah. It’s about control and precision. I teach my kids how to shoot. It’s not about violence—it’s about understanding power and being responsible with it.
Starlito: You talk to him long enough, you’ll be Googling calibers by the end of the day.
AllHipHop: Final thoughts?
Don Trip: Stepbrothers 4, out now. We touring, adding cities daily.
Starlito: We appreciate the love. This ain’t no trend. It’s a movement.










