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I Love My Computer

2025 studio album by Ninajirachi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I Love My Computer
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I Love My Computer is the debut studio album by Australian electronic DJ and producer Ninajirachi. The album was released on 8 August 2025. I Love My Computer's sound was influenced by electronic music Wilson listened to during childhood, including older Australian dance music as well as the genres of trance and complextro.[2]

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At the 2025 ARIA Music Awards, the album was nominated for Album of the Year, Best Solo Artist, Breakthrough Artist, Best Dance/Electronic Release, Best Independent Release, Best Cover Art, Best Engineered Release and Best Produced Release.[3]

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Release

Ninajirachi released her first single of 2025, "All I Am", on 25 February 2025.[4] On 14 May 2025, she released "Fuck My Computer".[5] Ninajirachi announced the album's release date alongside its third single, "iPod Touch", on 20 June 2025.[6] Upon announcement, Ninajirachi said "I've spent more time with my computer than any one person. It helped me discover who I am… All of my music is computer music—it's my instrument, and I don't know who I would be without it."[6] She released the album's fourth single, "Infohazard", on 17 July 2025.[7][8] On 7 August 2025, she released "It's You", the album's fifth single.[9]

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Critical reception

Jared Richards of The Guardian described the album as "an immensely fun and inventive dance album that doubles as a surprisingly touching coming-of-age story."[1] Alessio Anesi of EDM said: "The stunning album effectively crystallises the Australian artist as one of today's brightest young stars in the electronic music scene." Anesi said "[the] production lands as among the most unique in the contemporary electronic music landscape. Although Ninajirachi draws from sounds that were trending when she just was a toddler—like electroclash, YK2 trance and the complextro of Wolfgang Gartner and Zedd—this record feels modern and completely her own."[10] Katie Bain of Billboard described the album as "smart, stylish and ebullient, with a bit of edge and a lot of observations on living and loving in our computer world", calling it "one of the year's best dance albums".[11]

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Track listing

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Personnel

Credits adapted from Tidal.[12]

Charts

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References

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