The Fiddling portion with the plaid was intended to be a representation of the Eastern Coastal Canadians, specifically influence by George Street in St Johns, Newfoundland. From what I know Traditional Newfoundland folk music is Celtic/sea side shanty based to include fiddle, bodhrán, tin whistle, and squeeze box(which can give a sound not unlike pipes)

Below is information I found on the Newfoundland Heritage site www.heritage.nf.ca

"Scottish involvement with Newfoundland and Labrador dates back to the early 17th century, when English colonizers established a handful of year-round settlements on the island, but were largely unsuccessful in attracting settlers from that area. Scotland later established trade links with Newfoundland and Labrador in the early 18th century, after it joined with England in 1707 to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain. However, it was not until the 19th century that Scottish migrants settled at Newfoundland and Labrador in significant numbers. The 1857 Census (the first to enumerate Scots) recorded 416 Scottish-born people living on the island, the precise number of Scots who emigrated to Newfoundland and Labrador during the 19th century is unknown, due in large part to incomplete or vague census records, parish records, and other data. Although vastly outnumbered by settlers of English and Irish descent, Scottish immigrants were often among the most influential members of society and contributed much to the development of Newfoundland and Labrador's politics, economy, and culture.


"It was a substantial migration, peaking in the 1770's and 1780's when more than 100 ships and 5,000 men cleared Irish ports for the fishery. The exodus from Ulster to America excepted, it was the most substantial movement of Irish across the Atlantic in the 18th century. 1836 the government in St. John's commissioned a census that exceeded in its detail anything recorded to that time. More than 400 settlements were listed. The Irish, and their offspring, composed half the total population. Close to three-quarters of them lived in St. John's and its near hinterland, from Renews to Carbonear. There were probably more Catholic Irish concentrated in this relatively restricted stretch of shore than in any comparable Canadian space.In Newfoundland they created a distinctive subculture through the 18th century that is still evident"

"Chinese, Lebanese, Jewish, and immigrants of other ethnicities also arrived at Newfoundland and Labrador during the 19th century, but in significantly smaller numbers than those from the British Isles."