wurlybird9 that’s one thing I love about this music...the Sámi people (being an Arctic people) likely had interactions with Inuit and other tribes of the Arctic. The influence trickles down the American continent over thousands of years. On another note, I imagine so much Nordic music being played in Alaska and it seems to fit the imagery just as well. The climate, animals, trees. Hardanger fiddle music could be played in Alaska or the Yukon.
@@erikm8372 Search "Uralo-Siberian language family" if you're interested in links between Uralic people and Native Americans (there's also the somewhat obsolete Ural-Altai theory, which some still support), there are hundreds of lexical correspondences, shared morphology, syntax and regular sound correspondences, also when you take in the common origin of these people and genetical/cultural similarities, its very compelling, eg. in an Inuit dialect you could say "Kina mannit?", in Finnish and Estonian you would say "Kene munat?" and in North Sami you would say "Gean monit?", all of these mean "who's eggs are these?"
A-M-A-Z-I-N-G!!! 💎💖 GODDESS, how beautiful it is each people's uniqueness in this world! 😍 Congratulations on the initiative of making this! 👏 Cheers from Brazil! 🙋