Eem Triplin Isn't Slowing Down
How was it growing up in Pennsylvania?
Boring as fuck. Boring and broke.
Were you always around music growing up?
Kind of, yeah. My brother would play shit all the time. My brother always played music. He put me onto a lot of the shit I listen to now.
Was there an album that made you fall in love with music?
Live. Love. A$AP by A$AP Rocky. Wolf by Tyler, The Creator.
How'd you start working with $NOT?
He hopped on one of my beats on YouTube. From there it was just up.
You started posting beats on YouTube back in 2015, I believe it was. How do you feel about how easy it is now for musicians to put work out and get discovered?
It's good. It was good for me, shit. Thank God for the internet. I mean, yeah, it does make for a lot of over-saturation, but there's also some gems in there. And it just allows people to just get noticed more.
Can you describe the feeling when you're performing on stage?
It's just lit. If the crowd is lit, then the energy bounces off me and then I get turnt too. Even if it is a slower crowd, I realize I got to just thug it out. Still stay high-energy. And just thug it out. It's another art form I'm trying to master, performing.
Do you still get nervous?
Nah. A little before maybe. I mean, just a little bit, a slight anxious feeling. But once the DJ does, "Y'all ready for Eem Triplin?" And if they scream loud enough, then there's nothing to be nervous about. If they don't scream, then all right. I'm in for the challenge.
What's been your most memorable performance so far?
They’ve all really been the same; smooth. It's been lit. But we’re only two shows into this tour. Nothing crazy. I feel like my previous performances I was just getting my foot in the water. I feel like now this is an actual tour, but I don't know where I'm consistently moving. I don't know where I consistently go. I experiment. This is my first tour for real. And it's not my tour. I'm on tour with Lucki. It's really like this is my first time actually being out on tour like this.
Being one of the earlier acts at Rolling Loud last year, the crowd size probably wasn't what you were hoping. What were you feeling during and after that set?
I mean, right after I got into this underdog feeling where I'm like, Damn, folks are going to know soon. And I feel like that type of energy is what led to this shit getting noticed as much as it did because when I left, I was chill about it. I wasn't mad. I knew people were watching online and shit, but I was just like, ‘Man, folks going to find out soon enough.’ I wasn't tripping.
Has your mindset changed going into this year's Rolling Loud performance?
Yeah. I know that things just take time, you know what I'm saying? Growth. So even if this next performance isn't the craziest shit, I know as long as it's more than the last one, then I see growth there. That’s a W in my eyes.
When do you feel most creative?
Whenever I'm at home doing nothing. Whenever I’m bored. It’'s like whenever you’re bored, you got to make something. I feel like that's when the most ideas come, for sure.
With internet and streaming services, music's more accessible now than ever. What do you think it is about live music that keeps people coming to festivals like Rolling Loud?
It hits different whenever you see people that you only see on the phone screen, in real life. I feel like that's something that's priceless. You can't make up for that, seeing somebody in real life. Even if they're not the best performer, it's like you probably went from seeing this motherfucker on your phone every single day, to seeing them in real life where you can't press a pause button on them. You know what I'm saying?And it just hits a little different because it's like, ‘Shit, you’re right here.’
What's your ultimate goal?
To be the best that I can be and just take this shit as far as I can. Honestly. The only way is up. I'm just trying to make new shit, new sounds, new ways of approaching shit. I’m looking forward to the future.