Mark Moule Finds Quiet Power and Emotional Truth on “Only Love”
- Miles Coleman

- May 17
- 2 min read

A man wakes in the middle of the night with a lyric in his head. Years pass. Life changes. The world grows louder, colder, more uncertain. Yet the words remain, waiting patiently for the moment they finally belong somewhere. That lingering idea became Only Love, the debut EP from Mark Moule, and the result feels less like a manufactured release and more like a collection of truths finally given a voice.
Hailing from Busselton, Australia, Moule writes with the kind of emotional clarity that cannot be faked. His songwriting carries echoes of Cat Stevens and Phil Collins, not through imitation, but through the same instinct for honesty and reflection. There is a timeless quality running through this EP, driven by lyrics that are thoughtful, unguarded, and deeply connected to the emotional weight of everyday life.
What gives Only Love its strongest identity is its authenticity. Recorded in the home studio of collaborator Andy McManus, the EP never hides its humble beginnings. Instead, it embraces them. You can feel two musicians discovering the process together, trusting emotion over polish and substance over perfection. That raw atmosphere works in the project’s favour, giving the songs a warmth that many overproduced releases struggle to capture.
The title track stands at the emotional centre of the EP, carrying the history of an idea that lived quietly in Moule’s mind for more than fifteen years before finally taking shape. That long creative journey adds depth to the record, particularly as the themes feel unexpectedly relevant to the present moment. There is reflection here about connection, humanity, and the emotional distance that defines modern life, but the music never slips into cynicism. Instead, it reaches for hope.
Perhaps the most impressive aspect of this release is that it feels completely sincere. Nothing about Only Love sounds calculated for attention. It simply sounds real. That sincerity is often what separates music people briefly hear from music they genuinely remember.
For a debut effort, Mark Moule delivers a project filled with heart, purpose, and emotional conviction. Only Love introduces an artist who understands that the most powerful songs are often the ones brave enough to tell the truth.





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