Ozzy Osbourne’s Daughter Aimee Narrowly Escapes Deadly Recording Studio Fire

ARO - Credit: Ashton Herman*
ARO - Credit: Ashton Herman*
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UPDATE: Musician Nathan Avery Edwards has been identified as the man who died in the fire at the Hollywood recording studio Thursday night, according to CBS News. Firefighters now say they discovered a marijuana grow on the building’s second level, but it is still unclear what caused the fire.

Aimée Osbourne paid tribute to Edwards late Friday night. “Avery is the young man that was unable to escape the fire with us yesterday,” she wrote in an Instagram story, tagging his account @averydrift. “I am still in complete and utter shock and finding it unbearable to sit still long enough to feel and comprehend that Avery did not make it out. If there was anything any of us could have done, we would have. I can’t piece the words together right now to describe how utterly terrifying yesterday was. I am sending all the love I have to Avery’s friends and family. Thank you to all the people that helped us yesterday. @mrpaine_ you saved mine and @adambravin’s life.  We would not be here without you. Avery, you will not be forgotten.”

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Original story: Aimée Osbourne, who makes dusky electropop music under the name ARO and is Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne’s eldest daughter, escaped a deadly fire that claimed one life at a Hollywood recording studio Thursday night.

According to an Instagram post by Sharon Osbourne, she and the producer she was working with both made it out alive. “It is utterly heartbreaking that someone lost their life today in this fire, and we are sending our prayers to this person and their family,” she wrote. Los Angeles Times reported that the two survivors were suffering from smoke inhalation but declined hospitalization.

It took 78 firefighters and 51 minutes to extinguish the fire, which broke out shortly before 6 p.m. in an industrial building that houses several recording studios located at 6600 W. Lexington Ave. Because many of the studios had soundproofing, double drywall, and more than the usual amount of insulation, the Times reported, the building held onto the fire, making it difficult for the emergency responders. According to CBS News, the building dates back to the 1920s, making it exempt from fire sprinkler requirements.

“What happened today was beyond horrific,” Sharon Osbourne wrote. “I really hope moving forward that buildings like this are better regulated for fire safety. This building was a creative hub for music in Hollywood, a space that should have been regulated for fire code.”

A rep for ARO did not immediately return Rolling Stone‘s request for comment.

Hip-hop artist Maxxamillion told L.A.’s ABC7 that he lost his entire studio and $50,000 worth of equipment in the fire. “I opened the door, I saw smoke coming from across the hall,” he said. “I immediately reached over to grab a jug of water. I threw it at the door, flames bursted. I tried to go back to my room and grab anything I could, but flames were everywhere, and we ran out the building, and that was it.”

The LAFD’s arson investigators are looking into the fire to determine the cause. The Times reports that no firefighters were injured.

Last month, ARO released a new song, “Against Mine,” which she had written before the pandemic. “It was honestly one of the fastest songs I’ve ever written,” she told Rolling Stone. “It was miraculous.” She also said she had plans to release another new song, “Dahlia,” in the coming months and that she preferred single releases to full albums. “I feel a different sense of freedom and excitement that comes from releasing a couple of songs or a single at a time,” she said, adding that she hoped to launch a tour early next year.

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