The life of Swedish DJ Avicii is commemorated at his own museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Photo: Jacob Schulman / DancingAstronaut.com
The life of Swedish DJ Avicii is commemorated at his own museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Photo: Jacob Schulman / DancingAstronaut.com
The life of Swedish DJ Avicii is commemorated at his own museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Photo: Jacob Schulman / DancingAstronaut.com
The life of Swedish DJ Avicii is commemorated at his own museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Photo: Jacob Schulman / DancingAstronaut.com

The Avicii Experience captures the joy and tragedy of the Swedish DJ


Saeed Saeed
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How do you celebrate a pop star who died too young and too soon?

It’s a dilemma Ingmarie Halling faced in 2021 when curating the Avicii Experience in Stockholm, a now permanent museum dedicated to popular Swedish DJ Tim “Avicii” Berling, who took his own life in Oman five years ago at the age of 28.

As creative director of Pophouse Entertainment, an arts and events company in Sweden, Halling arrived at the project after curating a hit of her own.

Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, Abba The Museum is a tourist landmark in Stockholm with three levels of rare memorabilia, instruments, costumes and an audio guide featuring all band members.

Speaking to The National in the lead-up to Avicii’s birthday on Friday, Halling says highlighting Abba’s enduring success was more straightforward than Avicii’s.

“With Abba The Museum, we were working with the band members themselves (guitarist Bjorn Ulvaeus is also co-founder of Pophouse Entertainment) who provided their insights, information and were available to do the audio guide," she says.

"The Avicii Experience was a more tricky [project] because he is no longer with us and you try to find the balance between showing the joy he brought to our lives and the tragedy of his life.

“You can't look at how amazing he was as a composer without dealing with that sad story as well."

A graffiti installation in the Avicii Experience. AFP
A graffiti installation in the Avicii Experience. AFP

Launched in 2022, the Avicii Experience is in The Space Stockholm, an inner-city cultural centre with exhibition and performance stages.

A self-service museum – which Halling describes as “very Swedish” – tickets are bought online ($21.60) with entry accessible through a ticket barcode scanner at the door.

Inside is a relatively tight space bathed in blue neon light.

A large screen plays a welcome video blending Avicii performances and hits with interview footage.

Record sales plaques for the 2010 single Seek Bromance hang from the walls, alongside a range of Grammy Award nomination certificates.

It is the first of nearly a dozen rooms, ranging from large multimedia and VR exhibitions to a reflective corner, exploring various aspects of Avicii’s life.

The space was designed after extensive conversations with Avicii’s parents, Klas Bergling and Anki Liden.

Halling describes them as advisers of the project.

"We came up with an idea where we wanted to have our own take of Avicii's life and experience. We showed them our plans and they all loved it immediately," she says.

"Sometimes you need that distance when you are curating, or it gets confusing as people have different recollections and it all becomes a mishmash of ideas.”

A bedroom DJ

A recreation of Avicii's bedroom, featuring original items. AFP
A recreation of Avicii's bedroom, featuring original items. AFP

Those discussions recalled Avicii’s teenage years in the affluent suburban district of Ostermalm in east Stockholm.

One exhibit faithfully recreates Avicii’s bedroom.

Japanese calligraphy and childhood photos hang on the walls, the computer screen on a nearby study desk shows scenes from the online game World of Warcraft.

An acoustic guitar lies beside a television, with a PlayStation and Harry Potter DVD on the shelf.

"The bed is a replica, but the room has original items such as those wall pictures and computer games," Halling says.

"Through the production company Blizzard Entertainment, we also got access to Avicii's World of Warcraft games. We did a video of them which we play on the computer screen in the exhibition.

“This all really gives you an understanding of how his life was at home.”

His bedroom was where Avicii uploaded his first song, at the age of 17, a howling repetitive synth loop called, simply, Track One.

Beside the exhibition is a plaque reprinting his accompanying 2017 message on the Online Forum Studio website.

It already hints at Avicii’s ferocious work ethic: “Would be extremely grateful if someone feels inclined to give tips on what I need to improve in future songs as well as if the melody, kicks, etc, etc, suck.”

The joy and the pain

Avicii would go on to discover his own sound with career-defining hits Levels and Wake Me Up.

However, that road to inspiration was soundtracked by several important yet relatively unknown pieces.

Two of which are 2007’s progressive house tracks Walkthrough and A New Hope, created with fellow Swedish producer Philgood.

Never officially released, they now proudly thump out of speakers beside the museum’s recreation of Earfile Studio – complete with original keyboards, mixers and speakers – a pokey basement studio in Ostermalm where Avicii created some of his earliest works.

As we trace his skyrocketing success, the exhibits become louder and flashier.

A section allows us to remix a trio of Avicii hits (Levels, The Nights and Wake Me Up) with buttons muting or adding guitars, drums, synths and vocals.

Near by are sound booths with virtual reality goggles taking us into a Los Angeles studio where singer Aloe Blacc invites us to sing his vocals as part of the global hit Wake Me Up.

"I don't know whether this kind of virtual reality karaoke is available in the world,” Halling says.

“We shot these videos in proper studios in Stockholm and Los Angeles with Avicii's music collaborators. Aloe Blacc was so supportive, and he really loved the concept."

The Avicii Experience has become a go-to destination for fans and music lovers. AFP
The Avicii Experience has become a go-to destination for fans and music lovers. AFP

The thrills of composing and performing would eventually lose ground to some of the encroaching drawbacks of success.

The global hits, the incessant touring and Avicii’s anxiety resulted in a frenzied and suffocating lifestyle – an aspect the Avicii Experience channels effectively in a dark and hot room with a large screen showing manic video footage of Avicii concerts, noisy crowds, plane rides and blinding camera flashes.

Halling says it is meant to be disconcerting.

"That room is cramped, stressful and warm because it has no air conditioner," she says.

"In the planning stages people would tell us you need to have an air conditioner so people could breathe fresh air.

“We felt that we needed to somehow make people feel some of the pressure and downsides that come with stardom.”

Avicii’s death is handled delicately.

Instead of focusing on his deteriorating mental health, the Avicii Experience focuses on how he was going through a period of personal transformation.

This included retiring from live performance and embracing nature and self-care.

“During his excursion into the desert, his meditations became more intense and he seemed to be longing for peace and liberation,” reads a note on a sky-blue wall beside a black-and-white picture of Avicii.

“Despite his outward appearance, maybe he wasn’t as well as he seemed.”

A touring exhibition

The experience ends on an uplifting note, however.

In the Concert Room, visitors are invited to stand behind a fully decked DJ stage.

Footage from the Avicii Tribute Concert 2019 film is projected on the walls and roof.

With the Avicii Experience welcoming up to 5,000 visitors a month, Halling says plans are under way to take the show on the road.

"This is definitely part of the future plans. We are working with international companies and sponsors about hosting this exhibition," she says.

"Looking at the international visitors who make the Avicii Experience as part of their plans shows how important an artist he is."

While that global appeal is undeniable, Halling says Swedes will forever view Avicii as that shy local boy who did well.

"Swedes are very much the kind of people that don't really like to make a big fuss out of ourselves. And this is why Abba and Avicii are so huge outside Sweden," she says.

"Swedes love them both, like our many cultural and sports icons, but not too much and not too heavy.”

The Avicii Experience is open daily from 10am to 6pm, closed on Christmas Day; $21.60; Sergelgatan 2, Stockholm, Sweden; aviciiexperience.com

How Tesla’s price correction has hit fund managers

Investing in disruptive technology can be a bumpy ride, as investors in Tesla were reminded on Friday, when its stock dropped 7.5 per cent in early trading to $575.

It recovered slightly but still ended the week 15 per cent lower and is down a third from its all-time high of $883 on January 26. The electric car maker’s market cap fell from $834 billion to about $567bn in that time, a drop of an astonishing $267bn, and a blow for those who bought Tesla stock late.

The collapse also hit fund managers that have gone big on Tesla, notably the UK-based Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust and Cathie Wood’s ARK Innovation ETF.

Tesla is the top holding in both funds, making up a hefty 10 per cent of total assets under management. Both funds have fallen by a quarter in the past month.

Matt Weller, global head of market research at GAIN Capital, recently warned that Tesla founder Elon Musk had “flown a bit too close to the sun”, after getting carried away by investing $1.5bn of the company’s money in Bitcoin.

He also predicted Tesla’s sales could struggle as traditional auto manufacturers ramp up electric car production, destroying its first mover advantage.

AJ Bell’s Russ Mould warns that many investors buy tech stocks when earnings forecasts are rising, almost regardless of valuation. “When it works, it really works. But when it goes wrong, elevated valuations leave little or no downside protection.”

A Tesla correction was probably baked in after last year’s astonishing share price surge, and many investors will see this as an opportunity to load up at a reduced price.

Dramatic swings are to be expected when investing in disruptive technology, as Ms Wood at ARK makes clear.

Every week, she sends subscribers a commentary listing “stocks in our strategies that have appreciated or dropped more than 15 per cent in a day” during the week.

Her latest commentary, issued on Friday, showed seven stocks displaying extreme volatility, led by ExOne, a leader in binder jetting 3D printing technology. It jumped 24 per cent, boosted by news that fellow 3D printing specialist Stratasys had beaten fourth-quarter revenues and earnings expectations, seen as good news for the sector.

By contrast, computational drug and material discovery company Schrödinger fell 27 per cent after quarterly and full-year results showed its core software sales and drug development pipeline slowing.

Despite that setback, Ms Wood remains positive, arguing that its “medicinal chemistry platform offers a powerful and unique view into chemical space”.

In her weekly video view, she remains bullish, stating that: “We are on the right side of change, and disruptive innovation is going to deliver exponential growth trajectories for many of our companies, in fact, most of them.”

Ms Wood remains committed to Tesla as she expects global electric car sales to compound at an average annual rate of 82 per cent for the next five years.

She said these are so “enormous that some people find them unbelievable”, and argues that this scepticism, especially among institutional investors, “festers” and creates a great opportunity for ARK.

Only you can decide whether you are a believer or a festering sceptic. If it’s the former, then buckle up.

The biog

DOB: 25/12/92
Marital status: Single
Education: Post-graduate diploma in UAE Diplomacy and External Affairs at the Emirates Diplomatic Academy in Abu Dhabi
Hobbies: I love fencing, I used to fence at the MK Fencing Academy but I want to start again. I also love reading and writing
Lifelong goal: My dream is to be a state minister

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Updated: September 08, 2023, 6:02 PM