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My Dear Olof - as usually would open an email to the man -

it's very sad for me to get to know about Olof's passing away... I've been in touch with him for years, more than 15 years now, and I provided my contribution to his INVALUABLE website. He had confided in me, letting me know about his health problems, I was hoping this wouldn't happen this fast. Along with my friend Daniele Filosi we were almost to meet the great Olof in Stockholm, about a year ago, it would have been the first time meeting in person, but because of his health being already unsteady he didn't make it, eventually. It's now a huge regret for me.

Being a bit of an archivist myself, I know what kind of deep love hides behins a work that can be seen as very rational, and it is, but the force at the source is a love effort, for people to be able to navigate such a huge output as Bob's, for posterity. His website has proven INVALUABLE again and again. Also, it brings me back to more personal memories, when I would ask my Dad to print Olof's files so I could always have that resource at hand, physically, in my folders. My dad passed away 4 years ago, way before he has helped me greatly archiving info and making lists of Bob's material, even though he didn't really appreciate our man, but he would joke with my "in Bob family fellas and relatives", despising horribly Bob's masterpieces. My Dad, used to print Olof's files at work and bring them back home to me. More than 20 years ago. Because of the many edits and corrections I sent Olof, once he asked my for my physical address, and I provided but I didn't ask why, I wondered but didn't ask, and one day I received huge bags by her Majesty Postal Service, inside there were Olof's files, printed in books form by Hardinge Simpole. I found my name in most of the volumes' acknowledgments. It was surprising and moving. Lately, after Stockhom, I kept sending him ticket scans and some corrections. He didn't reply no more after letting me know he was really sorry that he didn't make it to the show in Stockhom. I was silently hoping this would be a temporary first stage, finding out about his own condition, and that then he would have found a way to adjust and carry on working on his website, maybe just slower than before.

But no replies whatsover left me with not much meaningful hope. Olof Bjorner will always be remembered. He was a GIANT. Others had done what he did before him, but NOBODY so diffusely, so precisely, so well organized and available for the world. Nobody did it so long as he did. He brought this knowledge to everybody and to the next level.

Ciao, my friend, you happened to be a Swede yourself, the kindest I ever (virtually, but that's irrelevant) met.

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Thank you for sharing this. He will surely be missed – by all his virtual friends!

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by the whole community, indeed, he stood as a beacon and he was always super kind and open, this is a very very sad loss, it particularly breaks my heart...

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Hail Olof.

May he roam the highways, byways, and causeways of the world like itinerant bards of yore and the superstars of today, with travails and tribulations and a warm place to sleep every night, a lover in every harbor, and friends at every fork in the road.

For me, my a-ha, hallelujah, Come to Jesus moment occurred when I discovered that the transcriptions on Dylan Chords were very accurate.

For many years, I’d been stymied by the sounds of Bob’s guitar on his early albums, and many years ago when I found the transcription for -It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue-, with the drop C tuning and the capo, on Eyolf’s site, I felt ecstatic like a Knight finding the Holy Grail. I never did find that Grail but I sure learned how to play Bobby’s songs just the way Bobby did!

I’ve been a constant traveler to those sites ever since. My all-time favorite resource on the World Wide Web.

I’ve been a huge follower of Bob, since I was 12: that was 63 years ago.

Glad is my heart to see that Bob is getting his due as an all time great artist. It used to infuriate me to see articles in the media, that treated him as an afterthought or worse, a clown.

Thank you Olof, and also to you, Eyolf, for helping to set the record straight.

The contributions you two gave the world are truly invaluable, which means more value than can be calculated.

That’s a pretty big gift.

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The two Scandinavian "-ol-f"s. It has happened more than once that the names have been mixed up... I always took that as an honour.

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Yes, very sad news...

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