Richard Mulholland
Stories (10)
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Music Marketing: How to Dominate the Quietest Months in Music!
There is a specific kind of heartbreak that seems reserved for independent musicians. It happens after six months of perfecting a mix. The cash has been saved for a music video. The release date is teased for weeks. A Friday in July is chosen because it feels like "summer vibe" season. The publish button is hit.
By Richard Mulholland29 days ago in 01
Structured AI Prompts Can Inspire Music Marketing
For many musicians, the hardest part of releasing music isn’t writing or recording it — it’s everything that comes after. Between designing artwork, managing social media, answering emails, and trying to stand out on streaming platforms, it’s easy to lose track of why you started making music in the first place.
By Richard Mulholland2 months ago in Beat
Rod Stewart's "Absolutely Live' : A Raw Snapshot of a Rock Icon in Motion
By the early 1980s, Rod Stewart had already conquered multiple genres and continents. From his blues-rock roots with Faces to disco flirtations like “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?”, he was more than a rock star—he was a musical shapeshifter.
By Richard Mulholland7 months ago in Beat
'Troubled Paradise' - New Music from Tuk Smith & The Restless Hearts
Tuk Smith isn’t one to sit still. After reclaiming his place in rock with 2024’s Rogue to Redemption, the Georgia-born, Nashville-based singer-songwriter is back with Troubled Paradise—a tightly wound four-song EP set to drop October 16, 2025, on his independent label, Gypsy Rose Records.
By Richard Mulholland7 months ago in Beat
Xtra Cherries Makes Enuff Z'Nuff Sweet with Style and Star Power
For longtime fans of Enuff Z’Nuff, the new album Xtra Cherries feels like a gift with layers—classic power-pop energy at its core, surrounded by glittering guest appearances and Chip Z’Nuff’s unmistakable songwriting charm.
By Richard Mulholland7 months ago in Beat
Keep Your Hands On Georgia Satellites' Ultimate and Lightnin' in a Bottle
If your memory of Southern rock ends with Skynyrd’s flame-out or Molly Hatchet’s fading riffs, it’s time to hit reset. In the mid-1980s, when hair spray ruled the Sunset Strip and synths flooded Top 40, a ragged, bourbon-soaked bar band out of Atlanta rewrote the rules.
By Richard Mulholland7 months ago in Beat
Spirit of '75 Brings 50 Years of Rock Legacy to Carteret
In 1975, rock music wasn’t just popular—it was a revolution. That year gave us Born to Run, Physical Graffiti, and A Night at the Opera, while debut albums from emerging bands quietly rewrote what live music could be.
By Richard Mulholland7 months ago in Beat









