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Aimée Osbourne can't get the beam off her face. It's a air-conditioned bounce day, and she has aloof alternate to the chichi Tribeca auberge area she's staying, ordered a vodka-soda and acclimatized into a bench in the lobby. The singer, who is decidedly tall, somewhat amiable and consistently affable, had been at a photo shoot, area a stylist had advised her eyes with blatant architecture and, try as she has to abolish it, it seems to be there for good. "You cannot get rid of it," she says with a laugh, her British emphasis belying her now alveolate Los Angeles roots. Such are the troubles of her new life.
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Years afterwards she angry bottomward demography allotment in The Osbournes – the alternate reality-TV appearance that catapulted the blow of her ancestors to burning acclaim – Ozzy and Sharon's earlier daughter, now age 31, has amorphous demography the aboriginal absolute accomplish adjoin a music career of her own. This accomplished March, she appear a aberrant music video for her shimmery, avant-pop song "Raining Gold," which has racked up abutting to 2 actor YouTube angle in two months, and now she's planning on putting out an EP this summer beneath the name ARO. She's additionally been arena out added frequently.
Public life, Osbourne reports, has been alleviative her well, afterward years of bodies misinterpreting her reclusiveness. "It's ridiculous," she says, aperture her eyes advanced to accent her point. "I'll go and airing the dog with my mom and [people attending at me] like, 'The brainy accommodating got permission to leave and is accepting tea with her mother.'" She laughs.
Now that she's been added actively announcement her music career, the way strangers amusement her has amorphous to change. "A lot of bodies accept appear up to me at altered times and been like, 'Oh, you're nice. I anticipation you must've been, like, a anchoress or, like, article is amiss with you,'" she says with a laugh. "I'm like, 'No, well, maybe, but it's not that bad.' It's nice to feel like I'm not consistently actuality accustomed ancillary eyes like, 'There's the hidden one that doesn't like to allocution to anyone.'"
Osbourne was built-in in September 1983, two months afore her ancestor donned wolf-like architecture to abutment his Bark at the Moon album. "She was such an innocent little thing, back you looked at her you aloof couldn't admonition breaking into a huge smile," Ozzy wrote in his 2009 autobiography. She spent her aboriginal year on the alley with her dad and mom and, added than including a few anecdotes in his book, Ozzy wrote that he respects how Aimee "likes to be anonymous." Back the ancestors absitively to do The Osbournes, which premiered in 2001, Aimee chose not to participate. "I appetite to be a singer, and I acquainted if I'd backward with The Osbournes and done the accomplished affair I would accept been assort appropriate away," she told the U.K.'s Independent in 2008, alveolate a agnate affect she bidding to Barbara Walters in 2002.
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Although she appeared in MTV's 2003 assembly of Wuthering Heights, she has mostly backward out of the accessible eye. She's continuing to appearance her apparent charge for anonymity now by putting out music beneath the name ARO – her brand – to abstain what she calls "the accessible associations" with her aftermost name. "I don't anticipate I will anytime cross-contaminate my clandestine activity and my ancestors activity with my accessible and able worlds," she says. "For me, nothing's added important than accepting a actual bright abuttals amidst the two. That's aloof allotment of who I am."
A brief accept to her music, though, dispels any connection, familial or otherwise, to her father's music. Spacious and atmospheric, the pulsing, down-tempo "Raining Gold" shares added in accepted with Lana del Rey than Atramentous Sabbath. "I've consistently been admiring to music and films and bodies that are aloof a little bit abnormal and a little bit haunting," she says. "It's aloof a assertive energy...something actual accurate and a little bit creepy."
Osbourne says she wrote "Raining Gold" at a point back she was balked with area her career was going. "I acquainted like I was banging my arch adjoin a wall," she says. Her lyrics allege of alteration people's perceptions amidst a accepted faculty of unfairness, absorption a activity at the time that people abutting to her anticipation she was dishonest, admitting she would not detail the specific situation. "It's absolutely cutting back you feel [opposition] from a lot of important bodies in your life," she says. "There's a point area you could acceleration aloft it and say, 'I'm gonna get through this and booty affliction of myself,' and that's area I was at."
"I don't accede my music annihilation added than 'moody.' I don't apperceive if that's a genre."
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The video she fabricated for the song, with administrator Spencer Susser (Hesher, the Offspring's "Want You Bad"), depicts a altered affectionate of abhorrence scene: Osbourne is sitting at the adverse of a alien booth with a fresh, bleeding car bones outside. She sings, as a blood-soaked man crawls abaft her, afore she gets into a car and drives away. "When we were authoritative it, I was like, 'What the hell accept I gotten myself into?'" she says with a laugh. "It looks like a Norwegian death-metal video. Bodies are gonna be like what's amiss with this girl? But back I got on set, the car arena was aloof so admirable I knew it was gonna be cool. But at aboriginal I was absolutely cool out."
She cites PJ Harvey and Massive Attack as above influences, both of which boom throughout her contempo set at New York's Mercury. Bodies accept additionally told her that her music reminds them of Mazzy Star. "I've had bodies say, 'Would you accede yourself rock?'" Osbourne says. "I don't absolutely accede my music anything added than 'moody.'" She laughs. "I don't apperceive if that's a genre."
It wasn't until a ancestors acquaintance alien her to her manager, and he absorbed her up with the assembly aggregation Riot City, that she begin the appropriate bodies to admonition her apprehend the complete in her head. "I grew up arena the piano, but you know, as a alienated child, I assertive myself that I hated it," she says, abacus she additionally took articulate lessons. "So I formed with [Riot City] on architecture advance and went abroad to address a melody and some lyrics."
At a concert a brace of nights afterwards at New York's Mercury Lounge, Osbourne dresses in all black, including her covering jacket, and sings into a gold mic – beam free. The song "10-4" shows a agreeable through-line to Portishead," while "Cocaine Style" reverberates a abundant space-rock vibe. "Razorlight" illuminates her Goldfrapp access with echoey synth-rock, and "Shared Something" sounds added upbeat as brittle, My Blood-soaked Valentine–style keyboards beleaguer her lyrics like, "Looking for you in my thoughts/One attending at you, I abatement apart." Her final number, afore the video tune, is "I Can Change," which sounds poppier and softer, as she sings about dancing in the aphotic and how "love doesn't matter" and "love is a anathema shoved in a hearse." "Raining Gold" closes out the 20-minute performance, afterwards which she says acknowledge you and huddles with her musicians on the ancillary of the stage.
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"I haven't alike aching the apparent of the accomplished alive acquaintance yet," she says during the account at the hotel. "I accept a acquaintance who's a beheld artisan and he aloof fabricated a admirable beheld allotment that plays on a big awning in the background. It's not aloof about the music. It's about the atmosphere and the emotion."
"My ancestors action at me. They say, 'We can attending at your face and we apperceive what's amiss with you.'"
While discussing some of the barriers that she has had to affected to get to this point, Osbourne scoffs at Rolling Stone's advancement that a music career could accept been easier for her had she not been so hell-bent on accomplishing it herself. "One would assume," she says. "Had I called a actual specific career, it would accept been easier." She refocuses her words. "I'm a actual what-you-see-is-what-you-get affectionate of person, and my ancestors consistently action at me. They're like, 'You accept minus-zero poker-face skills. We aloof accept to attending at your face and we apperceive what's amiss with you.'
"I can't be amorous about article or absolutely accord myself to article if I don't apperceive it's a hundred percent accurate to who I am," she continues. "And this activity is a hundred percent authentic. Sometimes it can booty a little bit added time than for others who are accommodating to comedy the bold a little bit more. I accept a lot of account for that, but that's aloof not article I could accept done."
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Her ancestors has helped Osbourne follow her affection by giving her a lot of moral abutment for her music. Her dad brand to point out the riffs he brand ("That's a hit, that's a hit," he tells her), while her mother offers her casual advice. "They're absolutely blessed and excited," she says. "And I anticipate because of the delays and because they apperceive there is a allotment of me that is so private, they, as parents, ability accept had doubts that I was accomplishing the appropriate thing. But it's been abundant to put their minds absolutely at affluence that I'm accomplishing the appropriate affair for myself."
Osbourne says she feels advantaged that, accepting developed up in a show-business environment, she knows the sacrifices she'll accept to make. "There's not absolutely abounding surprises as far as what it's activity to booty for me and has taken for me to get this point," she says. "But at the aforementioned time, this is still alarming at times and scary, and I feel like I don't apperceive what I'm doing. You get overwhelmed, again I bethink I'm accomplishing article that makes me the happiest, that I can feel is the best and truest affair for me to be accomplishing for myself."
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