The Rhythm of Heritage: Braylon J on Music, Patois, and Storytelling


Braylon J, an emerging artist deeply connected to his roots, believes that his Jamaican heritage is not just something to honor—it is something to live through music. He explains how his cultural background influences the way he speaks and performs, shaping the rhythm of his art. 
He states, “My heritage shapes my music on how I speak in a certain rhythm.” Speaking Patois taught me that storytelling is alive in rhythm. He continues, “The cadence of the movement—how ‘Mi Deh yah’ flows, how ‘Y pree’ dances off the tongue—brings emotion into every sentence. Language isn’t flat; Patois pulses. Storytelling in Patois is performance. Voice, intonation, timing—each word carries ancestral rhythm. When family spoke, the rhythm breathed life into folktales. When Miss Lou wrote, she elevated that vernacular heartbeat into literature. That’s the gift of Patois: it taught me to feel the story, not just tell it.”

Braylon J honors his family history by speaking the mother tongue in a beautiful dialect. “If it wasn’t for my family history and my own experiences, I don’t believe I’d be as good as I am as an artist,” he states. 

Braylon J offers advice to other upcoming artists: “Don’t let hate, low engagement, or limited exposure break you. If you keep going, the day you make it will come sooner than you think. Through his music and words, Braylon J demonstrates how heritage, language, and storytelling can breathe life into art, inspiring both listeners and fellow creators alike.

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