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    Home»Reviews»Ashnikko Trinkets Lyrics & Review: Meaning and Video
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    Ashnikko Trinkets Lyrics & Review: Meaning and Video

    Marcus AdetolaBy Marcus AdetolaAugust 18, 2025Updated:September 11, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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    Ashnikko Trinkets Lyrics & Review: Meaning and Video
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    Ashnikko’s Trinkets snaps open like a charm bracelet: bright, noisy, and a little wicked.

    Kicks in like a sugar rush you didn’t see coming. If you typed Ashnikko Trinkets lyrics because you’re trying to place that chant stuck in your head, it’s probably the “I want you, I’m a little trinket girl” hook blinking in your head.

    The single arrived August 12, 2025, with a video two days later, and it moves like a two-minute dare: cute on the surface, a little feral underneath.

    Ashnikko's Trinkets song artwork
    Ashnikko’s Trinkets song artwork

    Ashnikko frames desire as a collection. She’s talked about hoarding tiny objects and stringing them into life talismans, the kind of found things you wear because they store a memory.

    “I love to collect little found objects from the street and punch holes in them and tie them around my neck,” she said, joking about a silver trinket box “with teeth in it.”

    That private habit becomes public aesthetic here, where flirty trophy culture turns inside out.

    The record is a bite-size hit of chant, sub and sparkle. Slinger’s production keeps it compact and glossy, the drums springy, the low end rubbery, the synths almost candied.

    It’s co-written and produced with Slinger, Tove Burman, Elvira Anderfjärd and Luka Kloser, which matches what you hear: stacked vocals that gleam, a hook that lands fast, and the kind of pressure-sealed mix you associate with pop craftsmen who know exactly where to tuck the sweetness.

    It helps that the lyrics write the visual language for you. A few words paint the whole scene: “Pretty princess boys, they’re my found objects.”

    Then a keychain punchline that’s funny and a little wicked: “Treat him like a trinket” and “Hang him off my keychain.”

    Even the car detail turns specific and childish on purpose: “Drinking chocolate milk in my blue Bronco.”

    It reads playful, but there’s a clear power balance; the narrator is the curator, not the curated. 

    The video locks the concept. Director Léa Esmaili runs a mixed-media carousel of live-action, CG and stop-motion for BlinkInk, basically a dollhouse rave where the props keep whispering jokes.

    BlinkInk’s gallery shows racks of gummy-bright set pieces that mirror the song’s pocket-sized worldbuilding.

    Trade outlets called it “eye-catching madness,” which is about right, though there’s method in the chaos. Every object feels catalogued. Every cut is another shelf.

    Ashnikko is telling you how to read it. On socials she calls it her “little trinket emporium” and gushes that it’s “one of the best videos we’ve ever made,” a proud shopkeeper vibe that suits a single this compact.

    If the hook sounds like a mantra, that’s because the character loves labels and keepsakes and the right place for every shiny thing. There’s no apology for maximalism. Only delight. 

    Fans have clocked the sugar-high production and the bratty humor. Popheads commenters swing between “this is giving 2015 PC Music in the best way” and straight-up adoration for the visuals, with others wondering if there’s an interpolation hiding in plain sight.

    That split is useful. Short, chant-driven pop often divides the room, and Trinkets leans into that risk.

    There’s also an era statement tucked inside. Ashnikko has described the new album Smoochies as “sexy, playful and feminine,” the older sister to Demidevil with a taste for messy handbag energy and “joyful whimsy.”

    Trinkets wears that mission like a charm bracelet. It’s flirtation as inventory. Chaos as décor. Control disguised as cute.

    The album lands October 17, which gives this single the job of setting tone more than carrying narrative weight. It does exactly that.

    Zoom in on the sound once more and the choices feel deliberate.

    The structure is almost percussive: verse as quick sketch, pre-chorus as breath, chorus as stamp.

    The bass bounces without dragging, and the percussion has that slightly plasticky snap you associate with Y2K-era pop updated for short-form attention spans. 

    And then the words, tossed like stickers but sharpened at the edges.

    The chant “I want you, I want you” reads adolescent until you match it with the keychain image.

    It becomes a bit of design thinking. Who gets to be the charm and who gets to choose the chain. Even the silliest line has a function.

    “I spin on it like a Beyblade” is meant to make you laugh, sure, but it also flips the usual brag architecture in pop flirtation. The joke is a boundary marker. 

    All of this makes sense once you let Ashnikko speak for herself about where she’s at.

    “This is the first where I’ve written very autobiographically, but at the core of it all is personal autonomy and joyful whimsy,” she says, introducing Smoochies as Demidevil’s older sister who likes things a little grotesque, a little absurd.

    “I feel like purse sediment so much of the time,” she adds, and somehow that’s the perfect line to carry into a song about tiny keepsakes and the stories they hold. 

    One more reason the record snaps the way it does: the team. Slinger’s long collaboration with Ashnikko goes back years, and you can hear the comfort in the mix.

    He’s been the trusted co-pilot since Daisy, still bringing that punchy, pop-forward edge here while letting the vocal stack do the heavy lifting.

    What’s left to decide is whether you see “Trinkets” as pure flirt or a tiny revolt against being the thing on someone else’s chain.

    If the chorus is a smile, the question hiding behind it is simple: when you keep the charms you collect, what story do they tell about you.

    Trinkets is out now, and Smoochies follows October 17, 2025. UK tour dates tied to the album cycle kick off February 2026.

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    Ashnikko’s Trinkets Lyrics

    Intro
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl

    Verse 1
    Am I just a bird? Am I just a crow?
    Looking for, something shiny for my nest? (Ah-ah-ah)
    I collect them all, trinkets, souvenirs
    Pretty princess boys, they’re my found objects (Ah-ah-ah)

    Chorus
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl

    Post-Chorus
    Treat him like a trinket
    Hang him off my keychain
    I collect the kisses
    You could be my keepsake
    Like a trinket (I want you)
    Hang him off my keychain (I want you)
    I collect the kisses (I want you)
    You could be my—

    Verse 2
    He’s riding shotgun, my hand on his thigh
    Drinking chocolate milk in my blue Bronco (Ah-ah-ah)
    I spin on it like a beyblade, sit on his sweet face
    We do things that only God knows (Ah-ah-ah)

    Chorus
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl

    Post-Chorus
    Treat him like a trinket
    Hang him off my keychain
    I collect the kisses
    You could be my keepsake
    Like a trinket (I want you)
    Hang him off my keychain (I want you)
    I collect the kisses (I want you)
    You could be my—

    Chorus
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl (Girl)
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl

    Outro
    I want you, I want you
    I want you, I’m a little trinket girl

    Ashnikko
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    Marcus Adetola
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    Exploring new music. Explaining it shortly after. Keeping the classics close. Neon Music founder.

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