SINGER

Amanda Somerville

1979 - Today

Photo of Amanda Somerville

Icon of person Amanda Somerville

Amanda Somerville (born March 7, 1979) is an American singer-songwriter and vocal coach who resides in Wolfsburg, Germany. She is known primarily for her work with many European symphonic metal bands. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Amanda Somerville is the 2,894th most popular singer (down from 2,847th in 2019), the 15,285th most popular biography from United States (down from 14,824th in 2019) and the 801st most popular American Singer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Amanda Somerville by language

Loading...

Among SINGERS

Among singers, Amanda Somerville ranks 2,894 out of 4,381Before her are French Montana, Ruth Lorenzo, Can Bonomo, Deuce, Intars Busulis, and Chingiz Mustafayev. After her are Ki Daophet Niuhuang, ZP Theart, Dean, Jimmy Ruffin, Park Ji-yoon, and U-God.

Most Popular Singers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Amanda Somerville ranks 548Before her are Jaska Raatikainen, Luis Amaranto Perea, Hugo Alcântara, Yuichiro Nagai, Edu, and Vicente Sánchez. After her are Pablo Orbaiz, Julien Ingrassia, Brett Emerton, Maksym Kalynychenko, Pierre Bouvier, and Aldo Duscher.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In United States

Among people born in United States, Amanda Somerville ranks 15,291 out of 20,380Before her are Gabe Vincent (1996), Deuce (1983), Jack Sikma (1955), Jim Clyburn (1940), Carol Lewis (1963), and Ariana DeBose (1991). After her are Max Greenfield (1980), Noah Lyles (1997), Ernest Gruening (1887), Jessica Tuck (1963), Jane Bryan (1918), and Draymond Green (1990).

Among SINGERS In United States

Among singers born in United States, Amanda Somerville ranks 801Before her are Diane Schuur (1953), LeAnn Rimes (1982), Helen O'Connell (1920), Jennifer Paige (1973), Mark Tremonti (1974), and Deuce (1983). After her are Jimmy Ruffin (1936), U-God (1970), Randy Blythe (1971), Charlie Wilson (1953), G-Eazy (1989), and Freddy Cannon (1936).