Avicii - Never Leave Me -acapella- 16 — Bit Maste...

He’d found it buried in an old hard drive from 2016, one that belonged to a former studio assistant who’d worked briefly with Tim Bergling in Los Angeles. The assistant had died two years ago. His widow gave Leo the drive, not knowing what was on it. "Studio stuff," she’d said. "Maybe junk."

Leo flew to Stockholm to meet them. In a quiet studio, with the Berglings present, he rebuilt the track from scratch. They added strings recorded in the same room where Tim once played piano as a boy. They kept the acapella’s flaws — a crack in Tim’s voice on the word “goodbye” , a shaky breath before the final chorus. Avicii - Never Leave Me -Acapella- 16 Bit MASTE...

Within 24 hours, it reached #1 in 17 countries. He’d found it buried in an old hard

The track was released on what would have been Tim’s 33rd birthday. No radio push. No video. Just a silent drop on streaming platforms. "Studio stuff," she’d said

The track wasn’t finished. No beat, no synths — just Tim’s guide vocal, raw and breathy, recorded in one take. The lyrics were scratched on a napkin Leo found in the same drive: "You said you’d never leave me / But the silence cut deeper than goodbye / I’m still here, can you see me? / In the echo of a lullaby." It wasn’t a dance track. It was a ballad. Acoustic at heart. Leo could hear the strain in Tim’s voice — not from singing, but from living. A man composing his own requiem without knowing it.

Leo never made another remix. He became an archivist for the Avicii estate, preserving unreleased demos, notebook scribbles, and voice memos. On his wall hung a framed print of that original waveform — jagged, pale blue, alive.