“She’s the Osbourne nobody saw coming – and the one you need to hear.”
In a rare, raw, and deeply introspective conversation, Aimée Osbourne – musician, singer, and the eldest daughter of rock icon Ozzy Osbourne – steps out from the long-cast shadow of her last name and into her own spotlight. Zooming in from Los Angeles, Aimée opened up to Tom for a soul-baring interview that cuts through the noise and fame to reveal the quiet force behind ARO.
While the world obsessed over The Osbournes, Aimée chose silence. No reality TV cameras, no media circus, no fast fame. “It was never about rebellion,” she says. “I just knew I had to find my own voice before anyone tried to give me one.” And she meant it. In an era when her family became a household brand, Aimée disappeared – not out of defiance, but out of deep self-preservation. “I’ve always been proud of my family, but I also knew I needed to protect my own sense of self. That didn’t come easy, especially as Ozzy’s daughter.”
Now, years later, she’s finally ready to be heard—on her terms.
With ARO (her initials), Aimée unleashes a sound that’s haunting, cinematic, and emotionally intricate. Her latest single, “Shared Something With The Night,” isn’t just a track—it’s a confession draped in synth, shadow, and poetic tension. It’s the first taste of her long-awaited debut LP, a labor of love, pain, and purpose. “There were a lot of false starts,” she admits. “The industry didn’t know what to do with someone like me—someone who didn’t want to cash in on a last name.”
But she didn’t cave. She built something different. Something true.
Heavily influenced by her personal trinity of icons—Kate Bush, Annie Lennox, and PJ Harvey—Aimée’s sound is unapologetically moody, layered, theatrical. “Those women taught me that eccentricity is a strength. That you can be emotional, complex, and powerful all at once.”
And it shows.
ARO is not about chasing fame. It’s about crafting legacy. It’s about choosing meaning over visibility. While her siblings grew up onscreen, Aimée grew inward—and now her music lingers like a ghost in the room: subtle, aching, unforgettable.
“I’m still growing into my identity as an artist,” she says, “but for the first time, I feel like I’m telling the truth—my truth.”
Watch the full interview for a rare glimpse behind the curtain—family, fear, estrangement, and the long road to finding her voice.
Stream “Shared Something With The Night” by ARO—available everywhere now.
This isn’t just another Osbourne story. This is Aimée’s era. And it’s just beginning.