Pawn Shop (10 Year Anniversary Edition) Brothers Osborne
Album info
Album-Release:
2026
HRA-Release:
13.02.2026
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Dirt Rich 03:00
- 2 21 Summer 03:35
- 3 Stay A Little Longer 05:35
- 4 Pawn Shop 02:45
- 5 Rum 03:29
- 6 Loving Me Back 04:19
- 7 American Crazy 02:40
- 8 Greener Pastures 02:53
- 9 Down Home 03:39
- 10 Heart Shaped Locket 03:37
- 11 It Ain't My Fault 03:36
- 12 Arms Of Fire 03:59
- 13 Love The Lonely Out Of You (Live Pinebox Version) 05:29
- 14 Pins And Needles 03:21
- 15 Stay A Little Longer (demo) 04:15
- 16 Shoot From The Hip 03:33
- 17 21 Summer (demo) 03:28
Info for Pawn Shop (10 Year Anniversary Edition)
GRAMMY®-winning duo Brothers Osborne are celebrating 10 years since the release of their breakthrough album "Pawn Shop" with the release of "Pawn Shop - 10 Year Anniversary Edition".
Originally released in 2016, Pawn Shop marked a defining moment for Brothers Osborne, showcasing their sharp songwriting, musicianship, and refusal to conform to expectations. The album became a cornerstone of their career, producing enduring fan favorites including “21 Summer,” “Stay A Little Longer,” “Rum,” “It Ain’t My Fault,” and the title track, while laying the foundation for their rise as one of country music’s most respected and adventurous acts.
When the full anniversary edition arrives February 13, it will also include the previously unreleased song “Pins And Needles,” offering fans a brand-new recording from the Pawn Shop era and further underscoring the depth of material surrounding the album’s creation.
Upon its original release, Pawn Shop was widely praised for its fearless sound and sharp songwriting. Entertainment Weekly wrote that the album “positively sizzles,” driven by “ferocious guitars, stomping drum lines, and plenty of blue-collar fire.” The project produced multiple career-defining singles, including “Stay A Little Longer,” which reached No. 1 at country radio and earned a GRAMMY® nomination for Best Country Duo/Group Performance. Another standout, “It Ain’t My Fault,” climbed into the Top 10 and also received a GRAMMY® nomination.
Beyond chart success, Pawn Shop resonated for its storytelling and perspective. Dallas Observer noted that the album’s songwriting “paints a grimy, if nostalgic, picture of middle America,” while declaring it proof that “mainstream country doesn’t have to be garbage.” The record became a touchstone for a new generation of fans and artists alike, cementing Brothers Osborne as leaders of a progressive movement within the genre.
Over the past decade, Brothers Osborne have become one of country music’s most decorated and influential acts, earning 13 GRAMMY nominations (including a GRAMMY win for “Younger Me”), multiple CMA and ACM awards, and amassing more than 3.4 billion global streams. Yet Pawn Shop remains a defining chapter—an album that introduced their voice, challenged the status quo, and set the tone for everything that followed.
A decade later, Pawn Shop (10 Year Anniversary Edition) stands as both a celebration of where Brothers Osborne began and a testament to the lasting impact of an album that helped usher in a new era of country music.
Brothers Osborne
Brothers Osborne
Years before they climbed the country charts with songs like “Stay a Little Longer” and “Rum,” the Brothers Osborne grew up in Deale, Maryland, a small fishing town on the Atlantic seaboard. It was a cozy place, filled with blue-collar workers who made their living on the water. During the weekends, many of those workers would head over to the Osborne household, where a series of loose, all-night jam sessions filled the Maryland air with the sounds of Bob Seger, Hank Williams, Tom Petty and George Jones.
The Osborne siblings strummed their first chords during those jam sessions. From the very start, TJ Osborne was the brother with the voice. He sang in a thick, low baritone, crooning like Johnny Cash long before he was even old enough to drive. Older brother John, on the other hand, was the family’s guitar shredder, his fingers capable of down-home bluegrass licks, arena-worthy rock riffs, country twang, and everything in between. Combined, the two Osbornes could play everything from traditional country music to rock & roll, creating a broad, full-bodied sound that would eventually fill the 11 songs on their major-label debut, Pawn Shop.
Like its title suggests, Pawn Shop offers a little bit of everything. There’s bluesy slide guitar, country duets, southern rock solos, harmonies, and plenty of groove. The hooks are big, the guitars are loud, and the songs — every last one of them co-written by the Osbornes, who reached out to award-winning songwriters like Shane McAnally and Ross Copperman for help — introduce a duo whose music bridges the gap between the mainstream and the alternative world. Some songs were written at home in Nashville, while others came together on the road, where the guys spent several years headlining their own club shows, touring the country with Darius Rucker, and playing some of the biggest arenas in America with fellow rule-breaker Eric Church.
“Most duos are built on singing,” says TJ “But John is an incredible guitar player, and this band is built on me singing and John playing guitar. It gives us two parallels that work nicely together.”
“It’s like an old-school rock approach,” adds John, who cites classic bands like Aerosmith and the Allman Brothers as influences on the duo’s dynamic. “Groups like that always had the lead singer as well as the sideman guitar player. That’s what we’re going for, too. We’re carving our own path in country music.”
That unique path has already led the band toward the upper half of the country charts. “Rum” got them there first, mixing the feel-good sunshine of a beach tune with a far more realistic storyline. There’s no actual beach in “Rum,” after all. Instead, Brothers Osborne turn the song into a tribute to the simple pleasures that their Maryland hometown offers: friends, good weather, and the occasional drink. They even filmed the song’s music video in Deale, filling the clip with footage of friends, relatives, and locals.
“Most people we grew up with don’t go to these beautiful beaches,” says TJ. “They can’t afford to do it. They don’t have the time for it. What we’re most familiar with is people going to the local bars and hanging out with each other.” John adds, “We tried to have the biggest time possible with what little we had. ‘Rum’ explains that.” The brothers agree, “We had to say it from our own perspective.”
A similar theme runs throughout “Dirt Rich” and “Pawn Shop,” two songs that stress the importance of appreciating what you’ve got. Pawn Shop dishes up plenty of love songs, too, from “Loving Me Back” — an old-school country duet featuring vocals from Lee Ann Womack — to “Stay a Little Longer,” the band’s biggest hit to date. While a three-minute guitar solo brings “Stay a Little Longer” to an epic, anthemic close, Brothers Osborne also devote time to more laid-back songs, from the nostalgic California country of “21 Summer” to the 420-friendly “Greener Pastures.”
Brothers Osborne, who co-produced the album with Jay Joyce (the award-winning producer behind Little Big Town’s Painkiller, Eric Church’s The Outsiders, and Carrie Underwood’s Storyteller), recorded most of Pawn Shop during breaks in their busy touring schedule, using members of their own touring band rather than session musicians from the Nashville community. The result is an album that’s stamped with the unmistakable mark of a band. It doesn’t sound like two singers, flanked by anonymous players. Instead, it sounds like a group of road warriors who’ve spent years sharing bus seats and hotel rooms, creating the sort of chemistry that can’t be faked. Pawn Shop is both raw and real, and Brothers Osborne — who, years after those household jam sessions in Deale, now have a handful of nationwide tours under their belts, songs on the charts, and a career on the rise — are no longer a family secret.
This album contains no booklet.
