Cape Breton Post

Museum to honour late Swedish DJ

- HELENA SODERPALM

STOCKHOLM — A museum in memory of the late electronic dance DJ Avicii will open in his birthplace Stockholm as part of a new digital culture centre next year, its founders announced this week.

Avicii, whose real name was Tim Bergling, achieved world fame with his feel-good tracks “Wake Me Up”, “Hey Brother” and “Sunshine”, which he coproduced with David Guetta and which was nominated for a Grammy in 2012.

Bergling was found dead in Oman in April 2018, having taken his life at the age of 28. His family said at the time he had struggled with stress and “could not go on any longer”.

The museum, “Avicii Experience”, will be housed in Space, a new digital culture centre due to open in the summer of 2021, and is the joint project of Space, the Pophouse Entertainm­ent Group, and the Tim Bergling Foundation, which was founded by his parents Klas Bergling and Anki Lidén to support mental health awareness.

Visitors will be able to hear some of Bergling’s unpublishe­d music and look at photograph­s and memorabili­a, said Per Sundin, chief executive of Pophouse Entertainm­ent, which owns ABBA the Museum, also in Stockholm.

“There will be a story about Tim’s life, from his boyhood room where he was playing World of Warcraft with his friends, to his first songs, first demos,” said Sundin.

Mayor of Stockholm, Anna Konig Jerlmyr, told Reuters in an email she hoped the museum will spark a dialogue about mental health and suicide prevention.

Avicii, whose breakthrou­gh hit “Levels” was named by Billboard as one of the 100 songs to define the 2010s, announced he was retiring from touring in 2016, but kept on making music.

“We are convinced that what Tim did during his short time in life had an enormous impact, and still has,” said Sundin.

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