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Ashnikko in Providence

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Ashnikko
Roadrunner-Boston — Boston, MA

Ashnikko is a British-American artist who emerged in the late 2010s making deliberately weird, abrasive pop that felt like the internet had a voice. Songs like "Stupid" and "Cry" established her as someone uninterested in smoothing her edges for mainstream appeal — all distorted production, bratty vocals, and lyrics that get under your skin rather than flatter you. She's collaborated with artists like Yaya Bey and Shygirl, orbiting the same hyperpop-adjacent sphere where experimentation and commercial ambition awkwardly coexist. What separates her from pure shock value is that beneath the provocative aesthetic are actual hooks and melodies. Her music trades in anxiety, frustration, and social alienation but rarely feels self-pitying. She's become something of a cult figure for people who find mainstream pop both boring and insulting — fans who want their music to feel genuinely strange rather than strangely normal.

Her shows are chaotic in the best way. Expect crowds that actually engage rather than film, lots of crowd participation on tracks like "Deal with It," and an artist who seems genuinely amused by how unpolished everything is. She commits to the bit without being annoying about it.

Known for Stupid, Cry, Deal with It, Toxic, Swimming Pool

Providence has a solid indie and alternative foundation, but it's not typically known as a hyperpop or experimental pop hotspot. That said, the city has a scrappy DIY ethos that usually embraces left-field artists. Ashnikko's irreverent approach and genre-blending should find an audience willing to meet her somewhere in the weird middle.

Stay in College Hill, where you can actually walk around without feeling like you're in a dead zone—the neighborhood has real restaurants and bars. Eat at Chez Pascal or Oberlin for something serious. Before the show, spend an afternoon at the RISD Museum, which is legitimately excellent and free if you're a student or cheap enough if you're not. The museum's collection is small enough to actually process in a couple hours, which beats most cities. Walk down Benefit Street afterward. It's the kind of place that reminds you why people actually used to settle in New England intentionally.

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