Here We Go Again Song Id

2009 studio album past Demi Lovato

2009 studio anthology by Demi Lovato

Hither We Go Once more
Demi Lovato - Here We Go Again (Album).png
Studio album by

Demi Lovato

Released July 21, 2009 (2009-07-21)
Recorded February–April 2009
Genre

Pop rock[1]

Length 46:fifty
Label Hollywood
Producer
  • John Fields
  • Gary Clark
  • SuperSpy
  • Aris Archonitis
  • Jeannie Lurie
  • Chen Neeman
  • Adam Watts
  • Adam Dodd
Demi Lovato chronology
Don't Forget
(2008)
Here We Go Over again
(2009)
Unbroken
(2011)
Singles from Here Nosotros Become Again
  1. "Here We Go Again"
    Released: June 23, 2009
  2. "Remember December"
    Released: January 18, 2010

Here Nosotros Go Again is the second studio album by American singer Demi Lovato. Information technology was released on July 21, 2009, through Hollywood Records. Different their previous album, Don't Forget (2008), Lovato did not collaborate with the Jonas Brothers, as they wanted to work with different people and give the album a personal approach. Lovato collaborated for the album with established songwriters and producers, such as Due east. Kidd Bogart, Gary Clark, Toby Gad, John Mayer, Jon McLaughlin, Lindy Robbins and John Fields, who produced their previous album Don't Forget.

Here We Become Again derives mainly from the popular rock genre,[2] mixed with influences of ability pop, jazz-pop, soul and popular.[3] [4] Lovato described the anthology every bit more "relaxed" than their previous anthology, while exploring more mature sounds and lyrics. Critical reception of the album was positive; critics praised Lovato for not relying on vocal manipulations and instead showing off their natural power. Although some critics called the album catchy, others felt that it was predictable and at times besides much alike Kelly Clarkson. In the United States, the album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 selling 108,000 copies during its commencement calendar week of release, becoming the eighth solo artist to chart on the Billboard 200 under the age of 18.[5] Since its release, the album has sold over 500,000 copies in the U.s.a., and has been certified Gold past the RIAA.[6] Internationally, the album peaked inside the tiptop forty on charts in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Greece, Mexico, New Zealand and Spain. It was certified platinum in Brazil.

"Here We Go Again" was released as the pb unmarried from the album on June 23, 2009, and was Lovato'south first solo single to attain the height twenty on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number fifteen, and has been certified platinum by RIAA. "Recall Dec" was the second and final unmarried simply in Europe on January 18, 2010. To promote the album and their debut effort, Lovato embarked on their offset concert bout, entitled Demi Lovato: Live in Concert.

Groundwork [edit]

Lovato was discovered by the Disney Channel during an open call audition in their hometown of Dallas, Texas and fabricated their debut on the brusk series Equally the Bong Rings in 2007.[vii] They subsequently auditioned for a part on the tv set series Jonas, but did not get the part.[7] Instead, they received the main role in the television film Army camp Rock later singing for the network executives.[seven] Subsequently, they auditioned for a function on the series Sonny with a Chance, which they also received.[8] Lovato enlisted the Jonas Brothers, their Camp Stone co-stars, to work with them on their debut studio album, Don't Forget (2008).[ citation needed ] The writing began during filming of Army camp Rock in 2007 and continued on the ring's Look Me in the Eyes Bout in 2008.[8] [9] Lovato wanted to establish themselves equally a musician with the anthology, and not being known as simply "the person from Military camp Stone."[8] They said that their goal was to have fun on the album and that they would tackle deeper themes on their sophomore effort.[10]

The album was released in September 2008 and debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 chart.[11] Lovato recalled the feel, "It was like, O.K., you've done information technology. You're no longer just succeeding considering you lot're in a movie with the Jonas Brothers. These people bought your music for you."[7] Later in Feb 2009, Lovato's first headlining sitcom, Sonny with a Run a risk, premiered on Disney Channel.[7] Don't Forget was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Clan of America (RIAA)[12] and spawned 3 singles, "Go Back", "La La Land", and its title rails "Don't Forget".[7] In January 2009, Lovato announced to MTV News that they had already begun writing songs for their second studio anthology, as well as revealing its approach: "It's going to take a different sound, and so hopefully it goes over well. I sing a lot of rock, but this time I want to do more John Mayer-ish type of songs. Hopefully I can write with people like him. I dearest his music — it would exist astonishing."[13]

Development [edit]

In February 2009, Lovato started to piece of work on and record their 2d album, correct after filming the get-go season of Sonny with a Gamble. In April 2009, Lovato explained about the album'southward process and collaborating with songwriters from the album including Jon McLaughlin and The Academy Is... lead vocalist William Beckett.[14] According to Lovato, the album's writing process was nearly finished in merely 2 weeks, noting that they "basically went from full time acting style to full time album mode".[fourteen] Equally they wanted to reach more than "John Mayer-ish type of songs",[13] they contacted Mayer's management in club to collaborate with him, citing him as one of their biggest musical influences.[15] Mayer accepted the offer, of which Lovato said, "I was completely shocked [that he said yes]. Information technology was more than of a pipe dream. I didn't ever think it would be a reality, simply it came true. He was taking a chance on working with a younger creative person in the pop realm."[15] The two wrote three songs together, "World of Chances", "Love is the Answer" and "Shut Upward and Love Me".[15] [sixteen] Lovato said that information technology was intimidating to piece of work with him equally they were worried that he would non similar their lyrics, and they would become "super excited" whenever he complimented them.[17] "Globe of Chances", the first vocal Lovato and Mayer wrote, was the but of these songs to make the album's final cutting.[xvi] The song was inspired by Lovato'southward showtime experience of love and heartbreak.[18]

Lovato collaborated with Beckett on a song titled "For the Honey of a Daughter". Although not planning to write a personal vocal, a "actually long talk" with Beckett resulted in the song being written.[xvi] The song chronicles Lovato'southward relationship with their estranged birth father, who left the family when they were two years erstwhile.[15] In the song, they plead with their father to "put the bottle downward" and questions him: "How could you put your hands on the ones that you swore y'all loved?"[19] The vocal was set to appear on the anthology, just Lovato and their management felt of the vocal'due south subject would exist too much for their young audience and later was removed from the anthology.[7] [18] In an interview with Women's Clothing Daily, they explained: "When I took a step back, I realized I wouldn't similar those subjects being talked about in somebody else'southward habitation, with a seven-year-old and their mom."[18] Several other "emotional" songs were also put on concord.[eighteen] The song later appeared on their third studio album Unbroken released in September 2011, when Lovato had left Disney Aqueduct.[19]

Unlike their first studio album, Don't Forget, Lovato did not collaborate with the Jonas Brothers on Hither We Become Once more as they wanted to see what their audio would exist like without their input.[15] "They were the only people I'd ever written with. Once I wrote with unlike people, I wanted to go with that", they told the New York Daily News.[fifteen] They said that their outset album was "very Jonas" and that Here We Go Again is "a lilliputian fleck more like what'southward coming from my heart. It's more than me."[8] All the same, Lovato did piece of work with Nick Jonas on the song "Stop the World".[16] The majority of the album was produced past John Fields, who also handled production on Don't Forget.[vii] Other tracks were produced past SuperSpy, Gary Clark, Andy Dodd and Adam Watts.[20] "Catch Me" is the just song on the anthology for which Lovato received sole writing credit.[7] In an interview with The New York Times, they revealed that they wrote information technology in their room and that it means more to them than the rest of the album.[7]

Limerick [edit]

American pop stone vocalist Jon McLaughlin (pictured) was 1 of the many collaborators worked on the album.

Hither We Go Once more explores more mature sounds than Don't Forget,[26] with Lovato describing the project as "more relaxed and more mature" with a "soulful edge".[18] The lyrics are more personal than on their debut anthology as nearly of it was inspired by their experiences of love and heartbreak.[18] They stated that the album does not concur a particular theme every bit they wanted the songs to be "merely more than mature, more of me".[17] The album derives mainly from the genre of pop rock.[ii] Speaking to New York Daily News, Lovato said that the album's musical style includes "less stone and more mellow stuff", with a twist of R&B.[fifteen] "Here We Go Over again" is the first track of the album was written and produced past SuperSpy. The lyrics of the song chronicle Lovato's on-off relationship with an indecisive boy, singing that "Something about yous is then addictive".[21] "Solo", the 2d track, was co-written by Lovato and produced past John Fields. The runway is a breakup song with lyrics well-nigh self-respect.[21] "U Got Nothin' on Me", another SuperSpy production, includes influences of 1980s glam metallic, in this vocal, Lovato reminisces a summer romance that took a tumble which takes a toll on their human relationship, but in the finish, they realize they're fine on their own.[26]

"Falling Over Me" was co-written by Lovato and Jon McLaughlin and produced by Fields. The vocal features a "hypnotic" bassline and lyrics about Lovato praying that their crush will notice their affection: "I'one thousand hoping, I'm waiting, I'm praying yous are the one".[21] [26] According to Margaret Wappler of Los Angeles Times, Lovato'southward vocals in the vocal balance "delicacy and force".[27] On the fifth track, "Placidity", Lovato longs for a "communication breakthrough" in an awkward human relationship, complaining that "It'south too quiet in here".[21] [22] "Catch Me" is an acoustic ballad with a stripped-down production, written by Lovato themselves.[28] The song speaks of an unhealthy love connection, with Lovato going on even though they know "how badly this will injure me".[21] The 7th track, "Every Time You Prevarication", is a song with jazz influences and a "jaunty '70s vibe".[3] [26] Kerri Mason of Billboard commented that the song "swings like Maroon v's brand of radio soul". The song tells about self-respect and not putting up with lies in a relationship.[28] "Got Dynamite" was written by Gary Clark, E. Kidd Bogart and Victoria Horn and produced by Clark. The song features "ricocheting" synthesizers and a scattering pop punk riff.[ane] The lyrics utilise "violent metaphors" as invitations for a boy to "accident up" Lovato's defenses, with lines such as "Log in and endeavor to hack me" and "Kick senseless, my defenses".[21]

The 9th track, "Cease the World", was co-written by Lovato and Nick Jonas about falling in love with someone, but "people don't want you to".[16] The vocal includes a reference to the infamous criminal couple Bonnie and Clyde: "Like Bonnie and Clyde, allow'due south detect a ride."[21] Lovato wrote the album's tenth track, "Earth of Chances", with John Mayer. According to Allison Stewart of The Washington Mail, the ballad showcases the "rough grain" of Lovato's vocalization. The song tells nearly a daughter giving a boy she loves chances to fix their relationship only keeps messing up.[23] "Remember December" diverges from Lovato's usual pop rock audio into more prominent ability pop and synthpop with "a fleck of techno".[iii] [25] [29] In the vocal, they reminisce a wintertime romance: "I retrieve u.s.a. together / With a promise of forever."[1] [25] The twelfth and final track "Everything You're Not" was co-written by Toby Gad, Lindy Robbins and Lovato. The lyrics chronicle cocky-respect as Lovato sings "I desire a admirer who treats me similar a queen/I need respect, I need love/Nothing in between."[21] The first bonus track of the album, "Gift of a Friend", was co-written and produced by Adam Watts and Andy Dodd. The song is about non being able to "pursue our aspirations or deal with disappointments" without friends.[21] The second bonus rail, "So Far, So Great", was written and produced past Aris Archontis, Jeannie Lurie and Chen Neeman and served as the theme vocal of Sonny with a Chance.[3] The "stomping" power popular song is virtually chasing your dreams.[3] [21]

Critical reception [edit]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 65/100[30]
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [3]
The Arizona Commonwealth [31]
Billboard favorable[28]
The Buffalo News [32]
Entertainment Weekly B−[22]
Houston Relate [26]
Los Angeles Times [27]
PopMatters v/10[1]
Rolling Stone [33]

At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an boilerplate score of 65, based on half dozen reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews."[30] Margaret Wappler of Los Angeles Times rated the album 3 stars out of five and noted the Kelly Clarkson influences, writing that "For the bulk of the album, Lovato channels a witty, pouty ingenue in loftier heels who'south not afraid to phone call the shots, especially after a good cry."[27] Rating the album three and a half stars, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic noted the album's "mature veneer" and the "subtle shift buried underneath the relentlessly cheerful Radio Disney production and Lovato'southward irrepressible spunk", writing that "Both sonic characteristics tend to camouflage Demi'due south biggest moves away from teen pop."[3] Erlewine called the album "Not quite equally much fun [as Don't Forget], only however fun".[three] The Arizona Republic critic Ed Masley gave the album three and a half stars and recommended it for power pop fans.[31]

Entertainment Weekly 's Simon Vozick-Levinson graded the anthology B− and praised the "difficult-edged" tracks such as "Got Dynamite", calling them suggestions of "a direction that might prepare [them] apart in years to come".[22] Houston Chronicle critic Joey Guerra rated the album three stars and wrote: "Despite the Disney machine's presence, Here Nosotros Go Again doesn't rely besides heavily on 'tween trends, instead relying on Lovato's penchant for stone-drama and teaming [them] with a slew of older, established acts."[26] Kerri Mason of Billboard praised the album for not relying heavily on production and Auto-Melody, calling Lovato "a natural talent who could really accept flight after outgrowing Disney".[28] Mason wrote that the album includes "quiet surprises" and potential hits, particularly praising the title runway and "Take hold of Me".[28] Jeff Miers from The Buffalo News rated Here We Go Again two and a half stars out of iv, writing: "Unlike then many of [their] Disney-fied peers, Lovato can really sing, and part of what makes [their] sophomore try highly-seasoned is the lack of in-studio vocal manipulation."[32] Miers wrote that it is "refreshing" that Lovato does not demand Auto-Tune "to mask any lack of natural ability".[32] He concluded by calling the album "safe and pretty predictable, simply besides incredibly catchy".[32]

Allison Stewart of The Washington Postal service referred the album to equally a "smart, bristly, busy sophomore disc", writing that "Besides much of information technology apes Avril Lavigne, with the standard shouted choruses and hiccupped verses that are beginning to sound very '03."[23] Stewart named "Every Time You Lie" and "World of Chances" as "management signs pointing to a much more interesting career".[23] Awarding the album 5 out of ten points, Cody Miller of PopMatters was mixed in his review and said that Lovato "desperately wants to be Kelly Clarkson", writing "Lovato tin can't work miracles with mediocre pop songs similar Clarkson, just the young vocalist-actress has a bigger range than whatever of [their] contemporaries, and a better sense of on-record charisma."[1] Miller was mixed regarding album's content, saying that "there's nothing that really separates the tracks from each other. Nigh of the anthology's up-tempo numbers only alloy together."[i] He concluded his review: "Here We Go Again isn't perfect by whatever means, and when compared to someone like Clarkson or Pink, it'southward obvious the young vocalizer has lots of piece of work ahead of [them] if [they want] to truly cement [themselves] equally a serious, viable popular/stone artist outside of the Disney mold. But given the context, Hither We Go Again is certainly enjoyable to some scale."[1] Rolling Stone gave the album 3 stars out of five, saying "Lovato has chops and spunk alike to a fellow Texas popular singer, though [their] voice doesn't churn with Kelly Clarkson's gutsy heart yet."[33]

Commercial performance [edit]

Lovato performing "Catch Me" during A Special Night with Demi Lovato

In the U.s., Here Nosotros Go Again debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart with 108,000 copies sold in its commencement calendar week.[34] The effigy was an improvement over the outset-week sales of Don't Forget, which moved 89,000 copies.[34] The feat made Hither We Go Again the fourth album of 2009 under the Disney Music Group to pinnacle at number i.[34] In its second week, the album cruel to number eight with 39,000 copies sold.[35] At the end of 2009, the album ranked at number 109 on Billboard 'south yr-end chart.[36] As of July 2014, the anthology has sold 496,000 copies in the United states according to Billboard.[37]

In Canada, the album entered the Canadian Albums Nautical chart at number five,[38] and stayed on the nautical chart for v weeks.[39]

In Australia, the album spent i week at number xl on the ARIA Albums Chart.[40] In New Zealand, it debuted at number ten and spent a total of ix weeks on the chart.[41] In Mexico, Here We Go Again debuted at number 45 on the Top 100 Mexico nautical chart and reached its top position of 25 in its second week.[42] Beyond Europe, the album debuted at number 36 in Greece and later on reached number five.[43] In Spain, the album spent thirteen weeks on the chart and peaked at number 35.[44] In early on 2010, Here We Get Again made its debut at number 199 on the UK Albums Chart,[45] and number 141 on the Oricon albums chart in Nippon.[46] In October 2011, the album debuted and peaked at number 88 on the Ultratop chart in the Flanders region of Belgium.[47]

Promotion [edit]

Lovato performing the title track during A Special Dark with Demi Lovato

Radio Disney presented the world premiere of Here Nosotros Go Over again on July eighteen, 2009, during the programming Planet Premiere, where Lovato was interviewed by host Ernest "Ernie D" Martinez.[48] The album was replayed on the station the next day, and bachelor for streaming on Radio Disney'due south website from July 18 through July 24, 2009.[48] On July 17, 2009, Lovato appeared on The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien to perform the album's championship rails.[49] On July 23, they performed the single alongside the album cutting "Catch Me" on Expert Forenoon America, while performing the unmarried only on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon and The View later the same day.[l] [51] To promote the album's UK release, Lovato appeared on radio BBC Switch and logged into Habbo Hotel to conversation with their British fans in January 2010.[52] They afterwards performed "Recall Dec" on The Alan Titchmarsh Prove on January 29, 2010.[52] They were besides interviewed on British idiot box programs such as Bluish Peter, Daily Fix Chart Show, Alive from Studio Five, Freshly Squeezed and T4.[52]

To promote the album, Lovato embarked on their concert tour, Demi Lovato: Live in Concert. The tour began on June 21, 2009, in Hartford, Connecticut and previewed new songs from Here We Go Again, including "Call back December", "Cease the World" and "U Got Nothin' on Me".[53] It was confirmed on April xv, 2009, that David Archuleta would serve every bit the tour'south opening act, with songstress Jordan Pruitt and girl group KSM joining on select dates.[54] Lovato appear the collaboration with Archuleta on their Myspace blog, where they too wrote, "I'm so excited virtually headlining my own tour. I love life on the road. I'm in a different city every night, and it never gets one-time."[54] Tickets for the bout went on sale on April 25, 2009, simply a special pre-sale offering was fabricated bachelor through Lovato'south newly launched official fan social club on April 15.[55] The tour was produced past AEG Alive and sponsored past AT&T and Selection Hotels.[56]

Singles [edit]

"Here We Go Again" was released as the album's lead single on June 23, 2009, via digital download.[57] The song fabricated its debut at number 59 on the Billboard Hot 100 and managed to meridian at number 15, becoming Lovato's highest peaking solo unmarried at the fourth dimension.[58] Elsewhere, the vocal peaked at number 68 on the Canadian Hot 100 and 38 in New Zealand.[59] Critical reception of the song was generally positive, with critics comparison it to Kelly Clarkson.[1] [27] [28] The music video was directed past Brendan Malloy and Tim Wheeler.[60] The song has sold over 820,000 copies and was certified Platinum in the United States.[61]

"Remember December" was released on January xviii, 2010, just in Europe, as the 2nd and final single from the album. It wasn't released in Northward America. The song peaked at number 80 on the UK Singles Nautical chart and received by and large positive reviews from critics, who praised its hook and chorus.[1] [3] [62] "Remember December" was directed by Tim Wheeler and features invitee appearances from Lovato'south female person co-stars in their upcoming idiot box film Military camp Rock 2: The Concluding Jam. Instead of having a dearest interest in the video, Lovato chose to give it a girl empowerment theme, maxim that it is about "being trigger-happy" and "taking control as a girl".[24]

Rail list [edit]

No. Title Writer(southward) Producer(s) Length
1. "Hither We Go Again"
  • Isaac Hasson
  • Lindy Robbins
  • Mher Filian
SuperSpy three:46
2. "Solo"
  • Scott Cutler
  • Anne Preven
  • Demi Lovato
John Fields 3:15
3. "U Got Nothin' on Me"
  • Hasson
  • Filian
  • Lovato
SuperSpy three:38
4. "Falling Over Me"
  • Jon McLaughlin
  • Lovato
  • Fields
Fields iv:06
five. "Quiet"
  • Cutler
  • Preven
  • Lovato
Fields 2:45
half-dozen. "Catch Me" Lovato Fields 3:10
7. "Every Time Yous Lie"
  • McLaughlin
  • Fields
  • Lovato
Fields 3:49
viii. "Got Dynamite"
  • Gary Clark
  • E. Kidd Bogart
  • Victoria Horn
Clark iii:25
ix. "Terminate the Globe"
  • Nick Jonas
  • Lovato
  • PJ Bianco
Fields 3:34
x. "World of Chances"
  • John Mayer
  • Lovato
Fields 2:51
11. "Remember December"
  • Fields
  • Lovato
  • Preven
Fields iii:12
12. "Everything You're Non"
  • Toby Gad
  • Robbins
  • Lovato
Fields 3:43
13. "Gift of a Friend"
  • Adam Watts
  • Andy Dodd
  • Lovato
  • Dodd
  • Watts
three:25
fourteen. "So Far, Then Great" (from the original TV series Sonny with a Chance)
  • Aris Archontis
  • Jeannie Lurie
  • Chen Neeman
  • Archontis
  • Neeman
  • Lurie
ii:15
Total length: 46:fifty
European bonus tracks[63]
No. Title Writer(south) Producer(s) Length
15. "Don't Forget"
  • Lovato
  • N. Jonas
  • Joe Jonas
  • Kevin Jonas Two
  • Fields
  • Jonas Brothers
3:43
16. "La La Land"
  • Lovato
  • North. Jonas
  • J. Jonas
  • Jonas II
  • Fields
  • Jonas Brothers
3:16
Total length: 53:49
Japanese bonus track[64]
No. Title Writer(s) {{{extra_column}}} Length
15. "Here We Become Again" (Sunset in Ibiza Remix)
  • Hasson
  • Robbins
  • Filian
SuperSpy four:23
Japanese enhanced CD ebonus videos[64]
No. Title Length
16. "Hither We Get Again" (music video)
17. "Here We Become Again" (alive functioning at Wembley Arena)
18. "Remember Dec" (music video)
19. "Making of Remember Dec"
Brazilian/Colombian special edition DVD – Live at Wembley Arena[65] [66]
No. Title Length
1. "La La State"
2. "Become Back"
3. "Don't Forget"
iv. "Hither Nosotros Go Once more"
5. "Trainwreck"
6. "Until You lot're Mine"
7. "2 Worlds Collide"
eight. "Recollect Dec"
nine. "Political party"

Sampling credits

  • "Got Dynamite" contains acoustic drum samples from Geoff Dugmore's "Savage Beats" from Zero-G.[20]

Credits and personnel [edit]

Credits for Hither We Go Again are adapted from the album's liner notes.[20]

  • Demi Lovato – pb vocals, piano, guitar
  • Aris Archontis – producer, mixing
  • Tommy Barbarella – synthesizer
  • Michael Banal – drums, programming
  • Ken Chastain – percussion, programming
  • Daphne Chen – violin
  • Lauren Chipman – viola
  • Gary Clark – producer, instruments, programming
  • Bob Clearmountain – mixing
  • Mathew Cooker – cello
  • Jason Coons – engineer
  • Dorian Crozier – engineer, drums
  • Andy Dodd – producer
  • Richard Dodd – cello
  • Geoff Dugmore – drums
  • John Fields – producer, drums, bass guitar, keyboards, mixing, percussion, programming, background vocals
  • Mher Filian – keyboards, programming
  • Nikki Flores – background vocals
  • Eric Gorfain – violin
  • Paul David Hager – mixing
  • Isaac Hasson – programming, synthesizer
  • Nick Jonas – guitars, drums, background vocals
  • Chris Lord-Alge – mixing
  • Stephen Lu – string arranger, conductor, string
  • Jeannie Lurie – producer
  • John Mayer – guitars
  • Jon McLaughlin – pianoforte, synthesizer, background vocals
  • Steven Miller – engineer
  • Chen Neeman – producer
  • Sheryl Nields – photography
  • Will Owsley – guitar, synthesizer, groundwork vocals
  • Radu Pieptea – violin
  • Wes Precourt – violin
  • Lindy Robbins – background vocals
  • David Sage – viola
  • Simon Sampath-Kumar – engineer
  • David Snow – creative direction
  • SuperSpy – producers, engineers
  • Gavin Taylor – fine art direction, design
  • Jesse Owen Astin - Guitars
  • Adam Watts – producer

Awards and nominations [edit]

Year Award Category Outcome
2010 Teen Choice Awards "Pick Pop Album" Nominated

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

See also [edit]

  • List of Billboard 200 number-one albums of 2009

References [edit]

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  2. ^ a b "Hither We Go Again Album Review". Plugged In. Archived from the original on December 23, 2015. Retrieved December 27, 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e f grand h i Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Here We Go Once again – Demi Lovato". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved Oct nine, 2011.
  4. ^ "Demi Lovato". PopMatters. Archived from the original on October 7, 2015. Retrieved Baronial 29, 2015.
  5. ^ Lynch, Joe. "Solo Artists Who Scored a No. ane Album Before Turning 18". Billboard . Retrieved May 23, 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Ask Billboard: Demi Lovato'southward Career Anthology & Vocal Sales". Billboard. October fifteen, 2017. Archived from the original on October 15, 2017. Retrieved Oct fifteen, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d due east f g h i j Caramanica, Jon (July 15, 2009). "Tween Princess, Tweaked". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 15, 2013. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  8. ^ a b c d Moser, John J. (June 22, 2009). "Disney singing sensation Demi Lovato ready for new anthology, outset tour equally headliner". The Victoria Advocate. Victoria Abet Publishing Co. Archived from the original on August 18, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2011.
  9. ^ Donahue, Amy (June 15, 2008). "Jonas Brothers thrilling tweens". Reuters Group Express. Archived from the original on October 21, 2012. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  10. ^ Harris, Chris (August 28, 2008). "Demi Lovato Calls On Jonas Brothers For Help With Debut LP, Onstage Tumble". MTV News. Viacom. Archived from the original on Dec 1, 2011. Retrieved Oct 9, 2011.
  11. ^ Harris, Chris (October 1, 2008). "Metallica Are #1 For Tertiary Week In A Row, As Death Magnetic Nears Million-Sold Marker". MTV News. Viacom. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  12. ^ "Demi Lovato - Gold & Platinum". Recording Manufacture Association of America. Archived from the original on January 7, 2016. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
  13. ^ a b Vena, Jocelyn (January 27, 2009). "Demi Lovato Looking To Have 'John Mayer-ish' Songs On New Album". MTV News. Viacom. Archived from the original on Baronial 5, 2011. Retrieved Oct nine, 2011.
  14. ^ a b Reynolds, Chas (May 1, 2009). "Interview: Demi Lovato". Artistdirect. Rogue Digital. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved Oct 9, 2011.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Farber, Jim (June 20, 2009). "Demi Lovato mellows out with 'Here We Go Again'". New York Daily News. Mortimer Zuckerman. Archived from the original on June 26, 2009. Retrieved Oct nine, 2011.
  16. ^ a b c d east f Vena, Jocelyn (July 21, 2009). "Demi Lovato Gets Personal On Hither We Go Again". MTV News. Viacom. Archived from the original on December 22, 2011. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
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