By Romona Baxter- Black History Month (Guyana) continues to spotlight cultural pioneers whose artistry transcended borders and generations. Among them is Johnny Critchlow Braithwaite — affectionately known as Johnny Braff — a romantic crooner whose journey from humble beginnings in Kitty to international stages affirmed the power of Guyanese talent and the enduring resonance of authentic storytelling through music.
Before streaming; Before digital downloads; before global playlists, there was a voice. A voice that would rise from Station Street, Kitty, from modest beginnings in a household of fourteen, and travel far beyond the borders of Guyana.
A romantic crooner. A fearless performer. A man who trusted his gift.
He did not enter the world with a stage name. He earned one. Before the applause, he was a tradesman. An A-class plumber. A working man who sang on job sites, sang on breaks, sang because the music lived inside him. It was not strategy. It was instinct. And then came the risk. One night, before a packed audience at Astor cinema, he chose to step beyond the safety of familiar covers. He introduced something new, something written from his own experience, his own vulnerability.
The result? “It Burns Inside.” Not merely a song; a confession; a declaration that love, when real, does not whisper. It ignites.
At a time when Guyana’s entertainment scene was still defining itself, he stood with the confidence of someone who believed that a Guyanese voice deserved international space. He performed at Madison Square Garden, New York City; Mexico, Canada, London and across Europe. He opened for American acts. He shared stages beyond our shores. He signed contracts that carried him across oceans. He moved from local halls to global waters — literally — performing on international cruise ships long before global exposure was easily won.
He understood something powerful: Talent must be tested and then trusted.
His life was not polished. It was lived. Boldly. Publicly. Imperfectly. But always with conviction, and perhaps that is why he resonated. Because he was not manufactured, he was organic.
Johnny Braff once described himself as the “boy of the 70s music scene.” That phrase is telling. Not the king. Not the legend. The boy. There is humility in that — and also ownership. He knew the era. And the era knew him.
From comb-and-paper rhythms as a child, to commanding stages abroad, to national recognition at home….
For his contribution to Guyanese culture, he was honoured nationally and celebrated — a deserved tribute for a cultural icon whose music shaped a generation’s soundtrack of love and longing. He received the Guyana Folk Festival 2002 Wordsworth McAndrew Award and the Medal of Service by then President David Granger.
Johnny Braff proved that greatness does not always emerge from grand beginnings. Sometimes it rises from a small wooden house in Kitty — carried on a melody that refuses to be silenced.
Today, on this twenty-seventh day of Black History Month (Guyana), I present Guyanese music legend, Johnny Critchlow Braithwaite aka Johnny Braff, a son of Guyana whose voice once made a nation pause and feel.
Johnny Braff’s legacy endures as a reminder that greatness often emerges from ordinary spaces shaped by extraordinary passion. From the small wooden house in Kitty to stages across the world, his voice carried love, vulnerability and pride in Guyanese identity — leaving a musical imprint that continues to stir memory and emotion. Johnny Critchlow Braithwaite remains not only a legend of the 1970s music scene but a son of Guyana whose melody still echoes across time.
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