It was an emotional night in Birmingham, Ozzy Osbourneโ€™s hometown, as Kelly Osbourne took the stage to accept a special award on behalf of her legendary father ๐Ÿฅน๐Ÿ˜ข . DB

For years, it seemed like the Osbourne sisters lived in different worlds.Aimee, the quiet artist who preferred to keep her life out of the limelight.

Kelly, the outspoken firecracker whose sharp wit and colourful personality made her a household name.

But now, in a small London recording studio filled with candles, photographs, and soft light โ€” the two have come together again. And the reason has moved the world to tears.

The track theyโ€™ve chosen is โ€œChanges.โ€
Once a duet between Kelly Osbourne and her father, the late Ozzy Osbourne, the song captured a tender and rare moment of vulnerability from a man whose voice once thundered through arenas.

Now, two decades later, Aimee and Kelly have reunited to breathe new life into that same song โ€” but this time, it carries an even deeper resonance.This is not just music.

This is memory, healing, and a love letter to their father.

In the newly released footage from the session, Aimee sits at the piano, her hands trembling slightly before the first note. Kelly leans close, whispering something that makes them both smile. When they begin to sing, their voices intertwine like threads of silver โ€” soft, aching, and perfectly imperfect.

Fans watching the behind-the-scenes clip describe it as โ€œa moment of pure grace.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not about perfection,โ€ Kelly told The Sun. โ€œItโ€™s about truth. Itโ€™s about the feeling of being back in the room with Dad, even just for a few minutes.โ€


For years, rumours swirled about distance and differences between the Osbourne sisters.
Aimee, who chose not to appear on The Osbournes reality show that made her family global icons, lived largely out of the public eye. Kelly, on the other hand, became one of Britainโ€™s most recognisable pop culture figures โ€” with music hits, fashion shows, and TV stints across both sides of the Atlantic.

Their public paths rarely crossed.
Until now.

When the sisters entered the studio together earlier this year, it was the first time theyโ€™d worked side by side in nearly two decades. But what could have been awkward quickly became natural โ€” even healing.

โ€œThere was laughter, there were tears, but mostly there was love,โ€ Aimee said quietly in a BBC Radio 2 interview. โ€œWe both knew that Dad wouldโ€™ve wanted this โ€” not for publicity, but for peace.โ€

Ozzy Osbourneโ€™s passing left a void that rippled through generations of rock fans.
He was more than a heavy metal icon; he was a survivor โ€” of fame, addiction, illness, and redemption. To his fans, he was the Prince of Darkness. But to his daughters, he was just Dad: the man who sang lullabies in a rasping whisper, who called them โ€œmy girlsโ€ even when the world called him a legend.

Kelly remembers those early mornings in Los Angeles โ€” Ozzy making tea in the kitchen, humming something under his breath.
โ€œHeโ€™d always start the day with music,โ€ she said. โ€œEven if it was just a little hum. That was how he prayed.โ€

For Aimee, the memories are quieter, almost sacred.
โ€œThereโ€™s this moment Iโ€™ll never forget,โ€ she said. โ€œI was about fourteen, sitting by the window with my guitar, and he just came up, sat down next to me, and started playing the same chords. He didnโ€™t say anything. We just played. Thatโ€™s how we connected.โ€

When the sisters sing โ€œChangesโ€ now, that intimacy returns โ€” not as pain, but as peace.

Producer Rick Costa, who worked with them on the new version, said he could feel โ€œsomething spiritualโ€ in the room that day.

โ€œWhen they started singing together, everything else disappeared,โ€ he said. โ€œYou could feel Ozzy in the room. You could feel Sharonโ€™s heart, too โ€” the strength it takes to keep a family together through all those years.โ€

He described how, after the final take, no one spoke for nearly a minute. Kelly wiped her eyes. Aimee whispered, โ€œThat one was for him.โ€

Everyone knew it was the take that would stay.

The reimagined โ€œChangesโ€ isnโ€™t just a tribute; itโ€™s a renewal of a story once left unfinished.
Fans have flooded social media with messages of love and grief โ€” sharing memories of how the original version carried them through their own family struggles.

One fan wrote on X (formerly Twitter):

โ€œHearing Kelly and Aimee together feels like coming home again. You can hear Ozzyโ€™s spirit between their harmonies.โ€

Another added:

โ€œItโ€™s strange how a song written about change can change again โ€” and mean even more.โ€

The track will be released as part of a limited charity EP, with proceeds going to mental health and addiction recovery foundations โ€” causes Ozzy himself supported in his later years.

While the song is deeply personal, the sistersโ€™ reunion has also become a broader symbol โ€” of forgiveness, resilience, and the unbreakable bond of family.

Kelly, reflecting on their journey, told Rolling Stone UK:

โ€œWeโ€™ve both made mistakes, said things we wish we hadnโ€™t. But grief has a way of stripping everything back. Whatโ€™s left is love.โ€

Aimee added:

โ€œPeople think time heals everything โ€” it doesnโ€™t. Connection does. Thatโ€™s what we found again in that studio.โ€

Their mother, Sharon Osbourne, shared her thoughts in a rare post:

โ€œOzzy would be so proud. He always said, โ€˜Music will bring you home.โ€™ And it did.โ€

In a world that moves too fast, the Osbourne sisters have reminded us of something simple yet profound:
That love โ€” even fractured, even scarred โ€” can still find its harmony.

The closing line of their new version hits harder than ever:
โ€œIโ€™m going through changes.โ€

But this time, itโ€™s not a lament โ€” itโ€™s a promise.

As the final notes fade, Kelly leans her head on Aimeeโ€™s shoulder. Neither says a word. They donโ€™t need to. The music says it all.

And somewhere, fans believe, their father is smiling โ€” the eternal rock rebel watching his daughters carry the torch, not with noise, but with grace.

When the song officially debuts later this year, it wonโ€™t just be another family project โ€” it will be a moment of collective remembrance.
For every child whoโ€™s lost a parent, for every sibling whoโ€™s drifted apart and found their way back, โ€œChangesโ€ will echo as a hymn for the heart.

Itโ€™s more than nostalgia. Itโ€™s rebirth.Itโ€™s proof that even after loss, there can be beauty.

That music โ€” the very thing that made the Osbournes who they are โ€” is still the language that binds them together.

And as Kelly said in the closing line of the studio documentary:

โ€œMaybe this isnโ€™t the end of the story. Maybe this is where it finally begins again.โ€