Marx went on to release a number of other albums. In 1991 he released his third consecutive multi-platinum album
Rush Street. This album saw artists such as
Luther Vandross and
Billy Joel appear as backing vocalists and guest pianists. The disc's first single, "Keep Coming Back" went Top 10 pop as well as #1 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary charts for 4 weeks running. "Hazard", which depicted a man being wrongfully accused of murder in a fictional version of
Hazard, Nebraska, went #1 in charts around the world. Two more Top 10 singles were culled from
Rush Street with "Take This Heart" and "Chains Around My Heart". In August of 2001 Marx admitted that the track "Superstar," from the
Rush Street album was about pop star
Madonna.
In early 1994, as Richard and his family permanently left Los Angeles behind and returned to Chicago, Marx released
Paid Vacation, and scored his fourth consecutive platinum album. The acoustic ballad
Now and Forever spent 11 weeks in the Top 10 of the Hot 100 and also held the #1 position on Billboard's Adult Contemporary charts for 11 weeks - at the time just one week short of the all-time record. The follow-up single, "The Way She Loves Me", reached #3.
1997 saw the release of,
Flesh And Bone, Richard's final studio album with Capitol. Marx's sales cooled with this album in the States but was a major success in other parts of the world. The album's biggest hit was "Until I Find You Again", a ballad that hit #1 in several countries and #3 in the US.
Marx's first Greatest Hits compilation was released in November 1997. The 16-track album includes all of the hit singles from his first five albums plus "Angel’s Lullaby," a song written about his children that originally appeared on
For Our Children, Too, a compilation CD released in
1996 to benefit the
Pediatric AIDS Foundation. Greatest Hits was released in Asia in November 1998 and included two new songs, "Slipping Away" and "Thanks To You," a touching tribute to his mother. Marx’s dedication and support of numerous charities has continued throughout his career.
In
2000, Marx created his own record company "Signal 21 Records" with former
Blood, Sweat & Tears drummer and producer
Bobby Colomby. This label was the launching pad for Marx's sixth studio release titled "Days In Avalon." Due to distribution problems, it failed to chart in the U.S. The title song, however, was picked up by Adult Contemporary radio stations as an album track and spent 12 weeks in the Top 30. The label folded not long after.
In 2004, Marx signed a deal with EMI/Manhattan and returned to the Billboard charts with his album
My Own Best Enemy which featured the hits "When You're Gone" and "Ready To Fly".
In 2007 Marx released a new ballad titled "Your Goodbye" and a remixed version of his classic love song "Hold On To The Nights" on a
Phil Ramone compilation production called "New Music From An Old Friend." This compilation was released on the
Target label called Spotlight.