There’s a confidence to Finally that doesn’t try too hard to announce itself. It just gets on with it. After a few years of singles feeding into the Dirtbox orbit, Varkid’s debut album lands like something that’s been properly lived with, not rushed out to tick a box.
Released 24 April 2026 via Dirtbox Recordings, the album pulls together thirteen tracks that already carry some weight individually, but here they’re sequenced with a bit more care. It plays like a long-form set, moving through moods without losing its footing.
Lifetime opens things gently, easing the listener in rather than going straight for impact. There’s space in the mix, drums tucked just enough to let the atmosphere settle. It’s a patient start, and it works. Wait For You and Hide follow in a similar vein, rolling cleanly, keeping things controlled, letting the groove do the work.
Then the pressure builds. Cold Heart nudges the low-end forward, tightening the whole feel without flipping the tone completely. Needin U and Power sit nicely here, tracks that feel built for DJs, steady, reliable, easy to hold in a mix while everything else shifts around them.
Mid-album is where it really locks in. Bring The Fire still hits with that direct, no-nonsense energy. It hasn’t aged, and it doesn’t feel out of place here either. Around it, War and Selecta bring a bit more edge, leaning into a tougher groove without overloading the arrangement.
There’s a subtle jungle thread running through this section too. Not pushed to the front, but you can hear it in the way the breaks move and breathe. It gives the album a bit of swing, stops it feeling too straight or overly polished.
The closing stretch opens things out again. Think Of Me and Mind Games take their time, stretching the arrangements, letting ideas develop rather than cycling quickly. Lost In The Machine is a highlight here, long, patient, and confident enough to hold attention without constantly switching things up.
By the end, Finally feels complete without needing a big closing statement. It just settles. That’s part of its strength. There’s a clear sense of progression across the album, but it never feels forced.
For a debut, it lands well. It pulls together years of work, gives it shape, and lets it run. More importantly, it sounds like Varkid knows exactly where he sits within the Dirtbox sound, and he’s comfortable there. That goes a long way.
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