Paul and Joe Mullins to Ohio Country Music Hall of Fame

The Ohio Country Music Hall of Fame in Waynesville, OH has announced that Paul “Moon” Mullins and his son, Joe Mullins, will be inducted in 2025. Both father and son are recognized as bluegrass music icons, as well as celebrated radio broadcasters, in the state of Ohio.

Current bluegrass lovers are well acquainted with Joe, from his highly-successful touring band, The Radio Ramblers, his country and bluegrass radio network in southwestern Ohio, Real Roots Radio, and his twice-yearly festivals, Industrial Strength Bluegrass. But Joe is quick to attribute his natural talent, his professionalism, and his passion of broadcasting to his dad, along with his love for bluegrass and gospel music.

Paul, who died in 2008 at 71 years of age, was among the many Kentuckians who moved north to southern Ohio in search of work, though his career in music started in eastern Kentucky. A noted fiddler, a skill he picked up while stationed in Alaska with the US Army in the late 1950s, he went to work for The Stanley Brothers for a time when he was discharged. He then joined The Bluegrass Playboys, for whom he wrote the now classic song, Katy Daley, which they recorded as Katie Daly, which was based on an Irish drinking song.

As he became a popular radio host in Kentucky, and later Ohio, “Moon,” a nickname that derived from a popular comic strip, was also sought out as an MC at bluegrass festivals, a role he also served at the Bean Blossom Bluegrass Festivals in Brown County, IN at Bill Monroe’s behest.

Paul was involved in the founding of two 20th Century bluegrass bands that make the history books, The Boys From Indiana and The Traditional Grass, the latter of which was the bluegrass world’s introduction to a fresh-faced young banjo player and tenor singer named Joe Mullins.

That tenure with The Traditional Grass allowed Joe to go from a band member in his father’s group to leading his own band, absent the many years of working as a sideman with various groups on the way to becoming a solo artist. His own radio career was cemented when he purchased WBZI in Xenia, OH in 1995, followed shortly thereafter by a pair of other small regional stations. The Real Roots Radio signal now broadcasts on all three, as well as via online streaming, covering the bulk of southwestern Ohio and parts of Cincinnati and northern Kentucky.

Joe Mullins carries the family name forward in bluegrass with his many activities, which include hosting the widely-syndicated radio show, Front Porch Fellowship, while his son, Daniel, makes his own career in the bluegrass business world. Daniel has a popular noon time show on Real Roots Radio, and currently manages the two annual Industrial Strength Bluegrass Festivals.

Ohio Country Music Hall of Fame Director Jackie Thomas says of their 2025 inductees…

“The Ohio Country Music Hall of Fame remains true to its commitment of honoring Ohioans who have excelled in maintaining the genre of traditional country music with the induction of Paul Mullins (posthumously) and Joe Mullins. Both men have made it their mission to promote and preserve Ohio’s rich musical legacy. Their commitment to this aligns perfectly with our mission to ‘preserve the past in order to ensure the future’ for generations to come.”

The Mullinses will be inducted on April 26 during a ceremony at the Keepin’ It Country Farm in Waynesville, OH, starting at 7:00 p.m. The Radio Ramblers will perform, along with The Richard Lynch Band. Tickets for the show can be purchased online.

Many congratulations to Joe and Paul Mullins for this richly deserved honor!

Hall of Fame inductee Paul ‘Moon’ Mullins remembered by his son Joe

During the recent IBMA Bluegrass Awards Show, the late Paul “Moon” Mullins was recognized as one of the 2022 Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame inductees. As his family came forward to accept his award, technical glitches prevented audio clips and a photo collage of Mullins from being played. The following day, during a IBMA World of Bluegrass session on the 2022 HOF inductees, Joe Mullins, Paul’s only son, had but a few minutes to share memories of his dad, due to time constraints. As the late Paul Harvey used to say, here is the rest of the story, in the words of his son.

“Dad was a mountaineer, even though he was successful and traveled the world. He lived in a suburban area, but lived like it was the Depression. He cured his own ham, churned his own butter, and grew almost everything that Mama put on the table. He was a good weather man. He could look at the sky and know what to do agriculturally. His listeners cherished the fact that they had so much in common.”

You could hear the pride and intense respect in Joe’s voice. “He loved being hospitable. He and Mom were always feeding company… folks like Ralph Stanley, Larry Sparks, and Doyle Lawson and their bands. Night or day, there was always good food and good music going on at our house.”

A broadcaster for almost 45 years and a professional fiddle player, Paul “Moon” Mullins spent his life promoting the music that he grew up with and dearly loved.

“Dad’s main goal, whether on air or stage, was to present bluegrass music with professional integrity. He wore a suit and a tie. Though he called himself ‘a hayseed’ on the radio, he hated those stereotypes. He knew the secret to the success of the bluegrass economy.”

Mullins’ radio programs were extremely influential in the preservation of traditional country and bluegrass music. As a broadcaster, he introduced leagues of listeners to quality bluegrass from the 1960s through the early 2000s, playing with and promoting the bluegrass greats along the way. His broadcasts were extremely valued due to his rich knowledge of the music industry.

Joe continued, “In 1960, there wasn’t a big dividing line between bluegrass and country. It was country and western or hillbilly music. It was a combination. Dad had his own presentation. He gave just as much weight to JD Crowe as he did Loretta Lynn. He knew how to sell it on the radio: the songs and the pickers. He had to be real and present it that way.”

The senior Mullins’ radio career began in eastern Kentucky. After relocating to Ohio, he spent 17 years on Middletown’s WPFB (1964-1981). Paul, who gained the nickname “Moon” after a comic strip character, had a parting of ways with the station and left for Jellico, TN, to manage a local radio station there. (It was here Joe Mullins graduated high school and launched his own career on radio.)

The Ohio radio station realized their mistake in losing Moon. 

Joe shared, “In 1982, WPFB had a quarter million dollar loss. They got Dad back in the summer of 1983. In 1989, we put The Traditional Grass (the father/son bluegrass band) on the road full time. He went back on the radio from 1995-2005 at the first station I bought and rebuilt, WBZI in Xenia, Ohio. He retired then due to poor health.”

Though well-known for his radio work, Paul Mullins was quite the musician as well. He taught himself to play the fiddle while serving his country during the long, dark hours in Alaskan barracks. Returning to Kentucky, he played 1961-63 with a group called The Bluegrass Playboys.

“They played every little school house and church house in eastern Kentucky. Dad was a big deal in that area,” his son fondly recalled.

“Dad was given a poem by Chuck Seitz, Come Down the Mountain, Katy Daley. He recorded the very first bluegrass version of the song on the Briar International Music Label in October 1962. It was a big jukebox hit. That LP is a collectible. Ralph Stanley covered it in 1971 with Roy Lee Centers, Keith Whitley, and Ricky Skaggs (Something Old, Something New, Rebel Records SLP-1503). It became a jam session favorite.”

The elder Mullins respected many in the music. 

“Dad was moved by the fiddle playing of Jason Carter, Michael Cleveland, and David Crow, who put himself through law school playing fiddle with the Osborne Brothers. Dad had a real passion for seeing young musicians present bluegrass in the right way. These and other top players of the ’90s and 2000s excited Dad because they were still learning from the masters and learned ‘the lick’.”

When asked what Paul “Moon” Mullins would have said if he were living to accept his prestigious Hall of Fame induction, Joe studied a moment.

“He was so overcome with emotion when he received his Broadcaster of the Year Award and the Distinguished Achievement Award back-to-back in 2000. Terry Herd had been the broadcast winner the year before so he presented it to my dad. He said, ‘Thanks,’ and walked off. It scared Terry to death and embarrassed me a little bit. Then I surprised him with the Distinguished Achievement Award. He got a standing ovation. He was overcome with emotion. It had been a lifetime goal to uphold the integrity of the music. Often times, Dad was shy. He overcame it when he was on the radio or on stage. When it was just him, he wasn’t very good at it.”

Paul “Moon” Mullins passed away, August 3, 2008, at age 71, from Progressive Supranuclear Palsy, a neurological disease. His accomplishments in broadcasting and playing/performing traditional country and bluegrass music, as well as his contributions to the Appalachian community, will remain for generations. Thanks to Joe for sharing such precious memories of a life well-lived.

© Bluegrass Today [year]
powered by AhSo

Exit mobile version