Museum dedicated to Swedish DJ Avicii to open in Stockholm
Swedish musician, DJ, remixer and record producer Avicii (Tim Bergling) performs at the Summerburst music festival at Ullevi stadium in Gothenburg, Sweden, May 30, 2015 (AFP Photo)


An interactive museum dedicated to the late Grammy-nominated electronic dance DJ Avicii will open in Stockholm. The Swedish capital, already a world capital of pop music heritage with its renowned ABBA museum, is now on its way to becoming a pilgrimage site for electronic music fans with the Avicii Experience.

Almost four years after the sudden death of superstar DJ Avicii, who performed sold-out concerts for feverish fans around the world, Stockholm is preparing to launch the tribute museum on Feb. 26.

The exhibition will feature photos, videos, memorabilia and previously unreleased music by the artist and tell the story of how Avicii, whose real name was Tim Bergling, became a star of the electronic music scene.

Curators say Avicii Experience will track Bergling's life "from a reclusive music nerd to a celebrated superstar, from his boyhood room where it all started to the Los Angeles studio where the biggest hits were created."

City politicians had also announced in 2021 that a memorial site dedicated to the house musician is in the works. The memorial site, located in the upmarket district of Ostermalm where Bergling was born, grew up and went to school, will be a place where people can sit down for a while for some peace and quiet.

Tim Bergling, known for hits such as "Levels," "Sunshine" and "Wake Me Up," was found dead in Oman in April 2018, aged 28. He stopped touring and performing live in 2016, but continued to record music and worked as a producer.