When an artist drops something called "Detox," you already know the intention is to cleanse — to strip away the noise and come through pure, raw, and undeniable. Skippa does exactly that, delivering a visual and sonic experience that feels like a deliberate reset, a full purging of anything weak or watered-down. From the jump, the energy is locked in, and it's clear this isn't just another dancehall drop — this is a statement. The production rides a riddim that sits deep in the pocket, carrying that unmistakable Caribbean pulse while threading in modern elements that keep it fresh and forward-moving. Skippa's flow is controlled yet fiery, never rushing the beat but never letting it breathe too easy either — that balance is where real skill lives. Lyrically, "Detox" carries weight. Skippa isn't just chatting for the sake of rhythm — there's intention behind every line, and the cultural authenticity comes through with the kind of grounded confidence that the dancehall faithful respect. The video complements the music with visuals that match the mood: clean, sharp, and unapologetic. There's no filler here, no wasted frames. The styling, the energy of the performance, and the overall execution all point to an artist who understands that in dancehall, presentation and substance must move as one. This is the kind of content that earns rotation in the dance and demands volume from the selector. Skippa has served up something that hits different precisely because it feels genuine — no gimmicks, no shortcuts, just music built with purpose and delivered with conviction. "Detox" is the sound of an artist flushing out doubt and stepping fully into their lane, and if this is what a cleanse sounds like, then the dancehall scene could use more of it. Tune in, turn it up, and let the riddim do its work — Skippa just reminded everybody that real ones never need a warning shot.