Avicii News
First-Ever “Avicii Arena Together For A Better Day” Concert Set For Dec 1st!
The Tim Bergling Foundation and Avicii Arena announced today the first “Avicii Arena Together For A Better Day” concert will be on December 1st at the Avicii Arena in Stockholm. Tickets will be released on October 13 at 10.00 via https://aviciiarena.se/
The concert was created to draw attention to the need to help young people struggling with mental health issues and suicide and the alarming statistics that show their struggles increasing. This Avicii Arena Together For A Better Day concert is intended to be the first of an annual event. The name of the concert was derived from the Tim Bergling Foundation‘s work with the For A Better Day fundraiser, where young people posted their ideas about what they need to have a better future.
“I hope we succeed in creating a feeling that we really do this together, because it is only together that we can make a difference,” says Klas Bergling. “Young people are our future and we must be afraid for them. It is unacceptable that they are getting worse and that suicide rates are rising in that group – and it is our duty to do what we can to break that trend.”
Artists performing at the concert will come from multiple genres including EDM, classical music, rock, pop, R’n’B, and hip hop. The event highlights mostly Swedish artists including Håkan Hellström, Miriam Bryant, Galantis, Amason, Annika Norlin, Cherrie, A36, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and more. 14-year-old rising star Ella Tiritiello, who captured the world’s attention with her rendition of Avicii’s song ‘For A Better Day’ at the inauguration of the Avicii Arena will also perform, and the evening will include tributes to Avicii‘s musical heritage as well as collaborations and surprise guests. Stefan Olsson will be conducting the evening.
In May when the iconic landmark Ericsson Globe changed its name to Avicii Arena to honor Tim Bergling/aka Avicii, it was announced that in addition to its usual activities with concerts, sports, and other events, the arena would be a meeting place for young people’s mental health. The vision is to remove the stigma surrounding mental health, reduce mental illness among young people and get more people involved in the issue. Of paramount importance is to show what strength and power there is in young people if they are given the right tools and conditions.
For more information, see www.aviciiarena.se
Avicii News
Court Dismisses Ash Pournouri’s Lawsuit Against Avicii Estate
Swedish Court Dismisses Ash Pournouri’s Lawsuit Over His Portrayal in Avicii Documentary and Books
Avicii News
Wake Me Up: Avicii’s Song Passes 3 Billion Streams on Spotify
Avicii’s “Wake Me Up” crosses 3 billion Spotify streams more than a decade after its release.
More than a decade after its original release, Wake Me Up by Avicii has passed 3 billion streams on Spotify, marking one of the highest streaming milestones reached by an electronic-led track on the platform. First released in June 2013 as the lead single from Avicii’s debut studio album True, the song quickly became a global commercial success, achieving widespread radio play and sustained chart presence across multiple regions. Over time, “Wake Me Up” has continued to accumulate streams well beyond its initial release period, remaining a consistent presence across playlists and long-term listener activity tied to Avicii’s catalog. Its continued performance places it among a very small group of songs to cross the 3 billion mark on Spotify, a threshold reached by only a limited number of recordings across all genres. As streaming milestones increasingly reflect listening longevity as opposed to short-term popularity, “Wake Me Up” stands out as a release that has maintained relevance and listener interest year after year.
The Release of “Wake Me Up” and How It Marked a Turning Point for Avicii
The release of Wake Me Up followed several months of public exposure before it officially reached streaming and radio. The song was first played live by Avicii during his main stage set at Ultra Music Festival in March 2013, where its acoustic guitar intro and mid-tempo structure contrasted sharply with the big-room EDM sound common across festival lineups at the time. Audience reaction during that initial performance was mixed, but Avicii continued to include the track in subsequent shows across North America and Europe, indicating confidence in the direction of the record. The official release followed on 17 June 2013, with the song serving as the lead single from Avicii’s debut studio album True. At that point in his career, Avicii was already established through tracks such as “Levels”, making “Wake Me Up” a noticeable stylistic departure from the sound most closely associated with him.
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When “Wake Me Up” first premiered at Ultra Music Festival in 2013, the song was initially met with confusion and skepticism. The unconventional use of a live bluegrass band on stage, along with the unexpected blend of genres, was far from what the crowd had expected from an Avicii set. But as fans began taking in the lyrics, the melodies, and the genre-bending sound, “Wake Me Up” quickly soared to global success, topping charts around the world as the soundtrack of a generation. Now, almost 13 years since its release, “Wake Me Up” has passed 3 billion streams on Spotify, making it the most-streamed song by a Swedish artist on the platform. This remarkable milestone stands not only as a testament to its timeless significance but also echoes the profound impact Tim left on electronic dance music ◢ ◤
“Wake Me Up” features vocals from Aloe Blacc and was co-written with Salem Al Fakir, whose background in pop and songwriting brought a more traditional verse-chorus structure to the track. The production combined acoustic guitar, bass, hand percussion, and a restrained electronic arrangement, placing emphasis on lyrics and melody rather than festival-oriented drops. Following its release, the song held number one chart positions in markets including the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, and Sweden, while also becoming a long-running fixture on radio playlists throughout 2013 and 2014. Over time, “Wake Me Up” became Avicii’s most commercially successful release and remains his most streamed song on Spotify, with its recent passage of 3 billion streams reflecting sustained listening activity more than a decade after its original release.
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The lyrics of Wake Me Up are carried by a clear, repeatable idea that runs through the song without being broken up. The chorus centres on the line “So wake me up when it’s all over, when I’m wiser and I’m older,” a statement that openly accepts uncertainty in the present while pushing understanding into the future. That thought is reinforced throughout the song, where time is treated as something that teaches only after experience has already happened, not before it begins. The words do not suggest having answers, and they do not frame growth as something neat or immediate. Sung by Aloe Blacc, the lyrics stay conversational and plain, which is why the chorus in particular has remained easy to remember and easy to sing back in full during live shows. Years after its release, that central line continues to be the part of the song most closely associated with “Wake Me Up,” anchoring it as a track built around patience, time passing, and learning as life moves forward.
“Wake Me Up” Joins Spotify’s 3 Billion Club
By surpassing 3 billion streams on Spotify, “Wake Me Up” moves into one of the platform’s highest long-term listening tiers, a threshold reached by only a limited number of songs across all genres. Other recordings that have crossed the same mark include “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd, which has exceeded 4 billion streams, “Shape of You” by Ed Sheeran at well over 3.7 billion, “Someone You Loved” by Lewis Capaldi at just above 3 billion, and “Sunflower” by Post Malone and Swae Lee, which has also cleared the 3 billion line. These tracks are characterised by sustained daily listening over many years, not short-term peaks tied to release cycles. In that context, “Wake Me Up” is notable for being one of the earliest releases in this tier, having first appeared in 2013, and for being led by a producer associated primarily with electronic dance music rather than pop or hip-hop.
When the comparison is narrowed to electronic dance music and electronic-led releases, the field becomes significantly smaller. “Closer” and “Something Just Like This” by The Chainsmokers are among the very few electronic productions to have also passed 3 billion streams, supported by crossover radio exposure and long-term playlist placement. Just below that level sit several high-performing electronic dance music tracks that remain in the upper-two-billion range, including “Let Me Love You” by DJ Snake and Justin Bieber at approximately 2.8 billion streams, “One Kiss” by Calvin Harris and Dua Lipa at around 2.6 billion, “Happier” by Marshmello and Bastille at roughly 2.5 billion, and “Faded” by Alan Walker at just over 2.3 billion. The gap between those figures and the 3 billion mark underscores how rarely electronic dance music releases progress beyond the high-two-billion range. Against that landscape, “Wake Me Up” passing 3 billion streams places it among the most widely listened-to recordings on Spotify, not only within electronic dance music, but across the platform as a whole.
More than ten years after its release, “Wake Me Up” continues to record strong listening figures on Spotify, with its recent move past 3 billion streams confirming its position as the most streamed song in Avicii’s catalog. Very few electronic dance music releases from the early 2010s remain this active on streaming platforms, especially at numbers more commonly associated with long-running pop records. The milestone places “Wake Me Up” alongside a limited group of songs that listeners continue to return to well after their original release cycles. For those revisiting the track today, it also serves as a clear entry point into Avicii’s wider body of work, from earlier releases such as “Levels” through to the broader direction introduced on True, which remains central to how his music is discovered and replayed on streaming platforms.
Avicii News
Avicii Former Manager Ash Pournouri Sues Family Over Portrayal in True Stories Documentary
Avicii’s former manager Arash “Ash” Pournouri has initiated legal proceedings in Sweden against Avicii AB and several related companies controlled by the artist’s family. The case centers on how Pournouri believes he has been portrayed in the public narrative surrounding Avicii’s life, career, and death.
Pournouri argues that the documentary ‘Avicii: True Stories’ and two books have wrongly presented him as responsible for Bergling’s breakdown and suicide, including claims that he forced the artist to continue touring against his will. He maintains that these portrayals relate to a period after his professional relationship with Avicii had already ended in 2016, two years before Bergling’s death.
According to statements shared by Pournouri, the lawsuit is not about financial compensation but about correcting what he describes as an inaccurate and incomplete public record. He says he has spent years attempting to address these issues privately, out of respect for Bergling and his family, but now sees court proceedings as the only way to establish verified facts through documents, sworn testimony, and an official legal record.
Pournouri has emphasized that he does not ask the public to simply take his word for it. Instead, he says relevant documents, including emails, agreements, and dated records, will be made available so readers can judge the facts for themselves. He has also stated clear boundaries, saying he will not speculate, disclose private medical information, blame fans, or use the situation for personal profit.
The Bergling family has been contacted but has not commented on the lawsuit. As the case moves forward, it is likely to draw renewed attention to how Avicii’s legacy has been framed, and to broader questions around responsibility, transparency, and stewardship of an artist’s public narrative.
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