Arthur Gunter | ja

James Andrew Arthur (born 1988) is a British singer and musician who won the ninth series of The X Factor in 2012. His debut single, Impossible, was released after the final and debuted at #1 on the UK Singles Chart on 16 December 2012 in its first week of release. Since 2005, and prior to his participation in The X Factor, he was a vocalist and guitarist in a number of bands, and later, as a solo artist as well as forming his own The James Arthur Band and James Arthur Project. Arthur was born in Middlesbrough, England to English...
Other aliases include Florian Voelxen, John Tender, and Marc Monsen. .
Arthur Alexander (May 10, 1940 – June 9, 1993), born in Florence, Alabama, was perhaps one of the biggest stars to arise out of the American country-soul scene. Working with Muscle Shoals, a pioneering record label, Alexander's "You Better Move On" was the label's first hit and perhaps his best-known song, covered by The Rolling Stones. "Anna (Go to Him)" a US rhythm and blues Top Ten Hit (covered by The Beatles), "Soldier of Love" (covered by The Beatles, Marshall Crenshaw and Pearl Jam) and "Set Me Free" (covered by Esther Phillips and Joe Tex) were also major hits and...
Guenter Schulz, born Günter Schulz, is a German-born guitarist formerly of the band KMFDM. His first credited appearance (as Svetlana Ambrosius, or Svet Am) was on the band's Naïve album (1990). He continued using that stage name until 1995's Nihil. Schulz displayed an impressive mastery of speed metal guitar skills and co-wrote many of KMFDM's songs from the 1990s. He also wrote and performed in various KMFDM side projects, including two albums with Sascha Konietzko's Excessive Force and a solo album by En Esch. He currently resides near Vancouver, British Columbia. In early manifestations of the KMFDM web site, Schulz...
The Prayers and Tears of Arthur Digby Sellers is an enormous band centered around Perry Wright of Durham, NC. Wright formed P&T in 2003 and shortly after, released the band's debut, "Psalterie." The Radiohead-inspired, self-described "sad bastard music" propelled Prayers and Tears to regional fame and critical acclaim on the band's 2005 sophomore release "The Mother of Love Emulates the Shapes of Cynthia." .