It doesn’t get much more classic than this song by The Band. I’ve covered the “Playing for a Change” version with Robbie Robertson, Ringo Starr, and many musicians across the world. It’s been covered by many artists but The Bands version will always be the goto version for me.
Robbie Robertson said he wrote this song one day while noodling with his guitar and trying to come up with songs for Music From Big Pink. When he looked inside his Martin guitar he saw the standard Martin imprint saying that the instrument was crafted in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. The name of the town spurred memories of a journey he made from his native Canada down to the Mississippi Delta when he was 16 years old. He thought of all the characters he met on that trip, and in his mind heard voices singing what would become the song’s chorus.
Robbie Robertson also claims this was influenced by the work of Luis Buñuel, a Spanish director who made some of the first movies dealing with surrealism. Robertson was intrigued by the characters in his films, who were often good people who did bad things.
The song peaked at #63 in the Billboard 100, #31 in Canada, and #21 in the UK in 1968.
The song is a standard now…it’s been covered by (from wiki) Little Feat, the Chambers Brothers, Eric Church, Chris Stapleton, Stoney LaRue, The Staple Singers, Waylon Jennings, Joe Cocker, Travis, Grateful Dead, Blues Traveler, New Riders of the Purple Sage, O.A.R., Edwin McCain, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, the Black Crowes, Spooky Tooth, Hanson, Old Crow Medicine Show, Panic! at the Disco, Shannon Curfman, Aretha Franklin, Joan Osborne, John Denver, Trampled by Turtles, Cassandra Wilson, Miranda Lambert, Al Kooper, and Mike Bloomfield, Deana Carter, New Madrid, Dionne Warwick, and Gillian Welch. Mumford & Sons, RatDog, and Bob Weir are also known to cover this song from time to time. Additional notable versions are by Zac Brown Band, Hoyt Axton, Lee Ann Womack, Smith, Weezer, the Allman Brothers Band, the Marshall Tucker Band, Free Wild, Brian Fallon, Aaron Pritchett, and others.
From Songfacts
This tells the story of a guy who visits Nazareth, and is asked by his friend Fanny to visit several of her friends. “The Weight” that is his load are all these strange people he promised he would check on. The song was never a big hit, but it endures as a classic rock staple.
Robbie Robertson got the only writing credit for this song, although other members of the group claimed that they contributed to this as well as many of their other songs and were not credited. Since only the writer receives royalties for a song, this created a great deal of tension in The Band.
The vocals are shared by Richard Manuel, Rick Danko, and Levon Helm, who harmonize on the choruses. Helm takes lead on the first three verses; Danko takes the fourth (“Crazy Chester followed me…); Helm and Danko share the last verse (“Catch the cannonball…).
One of the distinctive characteristics of The Band was their three lead vocalists. Helm had the added challenge of singing from behind his drum kit when they played live.
Nazareth, where the story takes place, refers to the town in Pennsylvania about 70 miles north of Philadelphia. The rock group Nazareth got their name from this line (“Went down to Nazareth, I was feeling about half past dead…”).
In the liner notes for the Across the Great Divide box set, Robbie Robertson is quoted as saying he chose that place because they make legendary Martin guitars there, so he was aware of the town and been there once or twice. Citizens of Nazareth, Pennsylvania, were thrilled when Robertson acknowledged it as the setting in this famous song. >>
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The characters in the song – Crazy Chester, Luke, Anna Lee, are based on friends of the band. In Levon Helm’s autobiography This Wheel’s On Fire: Levon Helm And The Story Of The Band, he explained:
“We had two or three tunes, or pieces of tunes, and ‘The Weight’ was one I would work on. Robbie had that bit about going down to Nazareth – Pennsylvania, where the Martin guitar factory is at. The song was full of our favorite characters. ‘Luke’ was Jimmy Ray Paulman. ‘Young Anna Lee’ was Anna Lee Williams from Turkey Scratch. ‘Crazy Chester’ was a guy we all knew from Fayetteville who came into town on Saturdays wearing a full set of cap guns on his hips and kinda walked around town to help keep the peace,if you follow me. He was like Hopalong Cassidy, and he was a friend of the Hawks. Ronnie would always check with Crazy Chester to make sure there wasn’t any trouble around town. And Chester would reassure him that everything was peaceable and not to worry, because he was on the case. Two big cap guns, he wore, plus a toupee! There were also ‘Carmen and the Devil’, ‘Miss Moses’ and ‘Fanny,’ a name that just seemed to fit the picture. (I believe she looked a lot like Caladonia.) We recorded the song maybe four times. We weren’t really sure it was going to be on the album, but people really liked it. Rick, Richard, and I would switch the verses around among us, and we all sang the chorus: Put the load right on me!”
There has been more than a little debate among classic rock DJs and enthusiasts over the real meaning of this song. Yes, Robertson has insisted time and again there is no biblical subtext, but many people think he may be deflecting. Consider the following:
– The narrator can’t find a bed in Nazareth, and the guy to whom he makes an inquiry just smiles and says “no.”
– Carmen and the devil were walking side by side, Carmen can go but her friend the devil has to stick around – an allusion to ever-present temptations.
– “Crazy Chester followed me and he caught me in the fall” – possible allusion to Paul on the road to Damascus.
– The most glaring one: “I do believe it’s time to get back to Miss Fanny, you know she’s the only one who sent me here with her regards for everyone” – Miss Fanny is the one who sent him to Nazareth, but now it’s time for him to go back to her; Miss Fanny is God, the “time” in question is the crucifixion, and “regards for everyone” is Jesus dying for all of man’s sins.
This was used in the movie Easy Rider. The Band performed the version heard in the movie, but on the soundtrack, a different group was used because of legal issues.
On September 28, 1968, this song reached its peak US chart position of #63. That same day, Jackie DeShannon’s cover reached its peak of #55 US. DeShannon’s release wasn’t what she had in mind. She explained in her Songfacts interview: “I absolutely said, ‘No way I’m going to do it, it’s The Band’s record, goodbye.’ But the label kept calling me, so I finally said, ‘Well, if you can get confirmation from The Band that they’re not putting it out as a single and I can do it with their permission, then okay.’ So, I recorded it. The record’s going up the chart and all of a sudden, here comes The Band’s single. Then Aretha Franklin’s version comes out. So I was at a radio station talking to the program director, and there were two other people promoting the same record outside the door.”
Aretha Franklin’s version was the biggest hit, reaching #19 in March 1969. Many other acts have since covered the song. A version by Diana Ross and the Supremes with The Temptations reached #46 in October 1969, which was the last time it charted in America. The song was also recorded by: A Group Called Smith, The Black Crowes, Bob Dylan, Grateful Dead, The Allman Brothers, Joan Osborne, Keller Williams, King Curtis & Duane Allman, Otis & Travis, Rotary Connection, Spooky Tooth, and The Ventures.
The album title came from the big pink house in upstate New York they rented and used as a recording studio. The Band was Bob Dylan’s backup band, and they moved there to be near Dylan while he was recovering from a motorcycle accident. Dylan offered to help with this album, but The Band refused because they wanted to make a mark on their own.
Robbie Robertson described this song as being about “the impossibility of sainthood.”
The Staple Singers sing on this in The Band’s 1978 concert film The Last Waltz. “Being in The Last Waltz was the most beautiful thing that ever happened to the Staple Singers,” Mavis Staples told Rolling Stone in 2015. “I still can’t get offstage without doing ‘The Weight.'”
While most of The Last Waltz was taken from The Band’s farewell concert in San Francisco, this performance was shot on a sound stage.
The line, “Catch a Cannonball now, to take me down the line,” refers to a train. There was no real Cannonball except in legend: It was popularized in the song from the 1800s called “The Wabash Cannonball,” and mentioned in some blues songs of the early 1900s, including the original version of “C.C. Rider.”
In 2007, this was used in a commercial for Cingular Wireless. Levon Helm took issue with it and sued BBDO, the advertising agency that came up with the campaign. Said Helm: “It was just a complete, damn sellout of The Band – its reputation, its music; just as much disrespect as you could pour on Richard and Rick’s tombstones.”
The Band played this at Woodstock in 1969. The festival fit in well with their schedule, as they were touring to promote their first album, Music From Big Pink. Their performance stands out as a highlight from the festival, and earned The Band a great deal of exposure. >>
Scottish rock band Nazareth, who are best known for their transatlantic hit “Love Hurts,” took their name from a lyric in this song – “I pulled into Nazareth, Was feelin’ about half past dead.”
This song was featured in the 1978 documentary of The Band, The Last Waltz, directed by Martin Scorsese. Most of the film was shot at their Thanksgiving Day, 1976 concert at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco, but their performance of “The Weight” was done in a studio with The Band joined by The Staple Singers, a gospel group who wrung out the spirituality of the song.
In celebration of Band drummer Levon Helm, who died in 2012, “The Weight” was performed at the Grammy Awards the next year with Mavis Staples joining Elton John, Mumford & Sons, the Zac Brown Band and Brittany Howard of Alabama Shakes. Unlike many star-packed performances that get messy fast, this one worked. The song is a great showcase for multiple performers and served as a fitting tribute to Helm.
Aretha Franklin’s version featured Duane Allman playing slide guitar using an empty bottle of decongestant pills.
Joe Cocker also covered this song. It was included on the 2005 deluxe edition of his 1970 live album, Mad Dogs & Englishmen.
Weezer covered this in 2008 and released it as a bonus track on The Red Album.
The Weight
I pulled into Nazareth, was feeling ’bout half past dead
I just need some place where I can lay my head
Hey, mister, can you tell me, where a man might find a bed?
He just grinned and shook my hand, “No” was all he said
Take a load off Fanny, take a load for free
Take a load off Fanny, and you put the load right on me
I picked up my bags, I went looking for a place to hide
When I saw old Carmen and the Devil, walking side by side
I said, “Hey, Carmen, c’mon, let’s go downtown”
She said, “I gotta go, but my friend can stick around”
Take a load off Fanny, take a load for free
Take a load off Fanny, and you put the load right on me
Go down, Miss Moses, ain’t nothin’ you can say
It’s just old Luke, and Luke’s waiting on the judgment day
Well, Luke, my friend, what about young Annalee
He said, “Do me a favor, son, won’t you stay and keep Annalee company”
Take a load off Fanny, take a load for free
Take a load off Fanny, and you put the load right on me
[Rick Danko]
Crazy Chester followed me, and he caught me in the fog
Said, “I will fix your rag, if you’ll take Jack, my dog”
I said, “Wait a minute Chester, you know, I’m a peaceful man”
He said, “That’s okay, boy, won’t you feed him when you can”
Take a load off Fanny, take a load for free
Take a load off Fanny, and you put the load right on me
[Helm and Danko]
Catch the cannonball, now to take me down the line
My bag is sinking low, and I do believe it’s time
To get back to Miss Fanny, you know she’s the only one
Who sent me here, with her regards for everyone
Take a load off Fanny, take a load for free
Take a load off Fanny, and you put the load right on me

Hard to believe it wasn’t a bigger hit than it was. A song which has had a long shelf life!
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Off Topic Hans…. Ken Osmond (Eddie Haskell) passed away
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Great character- I can’t imagine the show without him.
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He balanced the sweet out…he was needed.
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Lumpy was a good character but was a little bit slow- Eddie was a wizenheimer!
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Yea you have to secretly like Eddie a little…he was funny. At first Lumpy was a bully but that got changed pretty quick.
One of the scenes that was funny but I can’t believe it. Eddie told Mrs. Cleaver he was allergic to mayonnaise… after that she loads a sandwich with it and gives it to Eddie…that is some dislike there…coming from a Cleaver.
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A great urban legend- Osmond became Alice Cooper!
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That is a great one. I did find out where the John Holmes is Eddie Haskell urban myth came from…Holmes went by “Eddie Haskell” for a while in his films and Osmond said that was a pain for him for around 11 years.
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Boy did business ever drive this band apart. Your right Max as it doesn’t get more classic than this track!
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A true classic. When you have a chance, check out this cover. It’ll blow your socks off! It truly shows music knows no boundaries!
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I love that version…I covered that earlier and couldn’t believe it when I found it. I was going to cover this song last year and I ran across this and just covered that version.
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Was that the social distancing version? That was a lot of fun. Thank you for sharing.
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lol I never thought of that! That was before but yea…that would fit today.
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My absolute favorite tune by The Band; I adored Levon Helm. The Playing for Change version made me cry.
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I just watched it again. Of all the songs they do…I like this one the best.
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Such a great song! Happy Monday. 🙂
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Happy Monday Eden!
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The Weight represents a load that a traveler carries involving all these strange people that he promised he would check on for his friend Miss Fanny. It is an obligation or a responsibility that he felt to fulfil his promise. Ida Frances Stelov also known as Fanny, was the founder of the Gotham Book Mart in New York City and Robertson used to frequent her store to check out the film section in the late 1960s. Robertson said that the image of “Carmen and the Devil walkin’ side by side”, was borrowed from an Ingmar Bergman movie “The Seventh Seal” and the famous chess game with Death. ‘Go Down Moses’ is an American Negro spiritual that was written by Arlo Guthrie and it is a civil rights anthem that connects the plight of Southern American blacks to the ancient Israelite slaves. I think this song has a morale, which is that if you are going someplace, then just go and don’t tell anyone, or otherwise you might be asked to do someone a favor or two.
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The origin of this song has been questioned so many times.
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I always thought there was something biblical about the words of this one… Riding into Nazareth… Apparently not!
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I know…I thought the same thing…in songfacts it says that some is…I’ll go with Robbie on this one.
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That’s a long list of covers…
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Very cool song, a big part of my early childhood background soundtrack too. Didn’t know Aretha had done a version let alone hit the charts with it, doesn’t seem like her type of music.
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I think it would have been less room to say who didn’t cover it…thats a partial list.
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I have always loved this song, musically. Lyrically, it does kinda come across as having biblical overtones. Apparently, Robertson had other things on his mind when he wrote it. It’s amusing as all get-out and it is sung as such (all three singers do impart some light-hearted frustration in delivery). I have the greatest of appreciation for a drummer…that can drum AND sing.
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Drummers and bass player singers are special…it’s not easy for both.
Robbie is interesting…he wrote his songs by reading scripts…old movie scripts. He would write songs like scripts.
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He did good. It’s an interesting story with funny characters.
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Yes he did…Oh I replied finally!
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I haven’t looked at my emails all day. Humpf…
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I know what you mean. I only checked work today until I replied tonight.
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This song has been so much a part of the landscape for so long it has become a cultural icon. I had no idea it had been covered by so many. I love these guys and the music they created together.
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That is what surprised me….the covers…it is a standard now.
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One of my top bands. One of the many reasons they appealed to me was the different vocalists. What a wealth of greatness for my ear.
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Great song, great post. Thank you, I must reblog.
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One of their best tunes. My band played this song for about 20 years and always got a great crowd response. ” The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” got us into trouble a few times at clubs. Folks considered a racist song because it was set in the old Antebellum south. Joan Baez got away with it at Woodstock, so what’s the big deal. Right?
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Hey Phil…I’m sorry the spam filter caught this comment. I just don’t get it at all. Everything seems racist now. You cannot say anything without a pointy little finger at you. It’s a story of a time…there is nothing racist about it.
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It’s ok Max, WordPress is becoming Facebook. If you go to reader, and hit search, it’s staggering the amount of racist and filthy blog sites are on WordPress these days. Dixie, Antebellum and such are considered racist? Strange how things change. I guess that’s what we have going forward.
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