I'll try and find links to a CBC documentary. The Hudson's Bay company founded a post on the east side of the bay. They taught Cree Indians to play fiddle. The tunes were Scottish.
The Cree never mutated or changed the tunes. They were taken to Scotland and astounded the musicians with the original tunes from the late 1600's or early 1700's.

Too bad the Vikings that found the continet first and landed in Newfoundland and Labrador didn't leave us music. Of course they were followed by the Templars who only left curious marks, then by the others.

Many of the people in the mountains were hiding from the revolution. Others moved north in droves, including my g grandfather's neighbours. It's fun to visit the old farm we visited when I was a kid. All Amish people now, would look like my ancestors farming with the horses and on some roads they just plain took down the hydro poles for miles. Weird. Really bad land too, more rocks than dirt.

Every year the Shriners of eastern US and Canada go to Pikeville to drink shine and dress up as hillbilly clans. I didn't go that route, the initiation involves getting rubbed with limberger cheese....wow.


John Conley
Musica est vita