The phone will ring again. "Here We Go Again" was first covered in an instrumental jazz format, and many of the more recent covers have been sung as In November 1959, after twelve years as a professional musician, Ray Charles signed with ABC Records, following the expiration of his "Here We Go Again" was recorded during a phase in Charles' career when he was focused on performing country music.First released by Charles in 1967, "Here We Go Again" was written by Lanier and Steagall and published by the Dirk Music Company.According to the sheet music published by Dirk Music, "Here We Go Again" is set in 12/8 time with a slow shuffle Greenwald described the original version of "Here We Go Again" as "Another excellent example of how Ray Charles was able to fuse blues and country".According to Allmusic, the solo version is listed at lengths between 3:14 and 3:20 on various albums.Charles is credited as vocalist and pianist with unknown accompaniment. Here we go again. That there's no no way to win. This is one of two songs on the album ("According to Allmusic the original track was 3:09, but when it appeared on the 2006 compilation album In 2004, Charles re-recorded "Here We Go Again" as a duet with American singer-songwriter In December 2004, the Jones–Charles version of the song was nominated in two categories at the After the album earned eight Grammy Awards and the song won Record of the Year, sales picked up and the album was re-promoted.According to Allmusic, the duet version was between 3:56 and 3:59 on various albums.The song was recorded at RPM International Studio (Los Angeles), mixed at Willie Nelson and Wynton Marsalis, along with Norah Jones, performed two concerts at George Strait's country music version was performed with the instrumental support of Joe Chemay (bass guitar), The song plays during the opening credit dance by Franz ( It was record producer by Joe Adams for ABC Records/Tangerine Records. Any fool, any fool knows. In total, five different versions have been listed on the music charts. Although its two most successful versions have been rhythm and blues recordings, many of its other notable covers were featured on country music albums. "Here We Go Again" is a country music standard written by Don Lanier and Red Steagall that first became notable as a rhythm and blues single by Ray Charles from his 1967 album Ray Charles Invites You to Listen. And I will try it again. To date, this version of the song has been the biggest commercial success, spending twelve consecutive weeks on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at number 15. One more time. The song has been covered in a wide variety of musical genres. Here we go again. I've been there before. Feller is credited for having arranged and conducted the recording. I'll be her fool again, I will.