There is a truism that art makes the strange familiar and makes the familiar strange. The Band’s biggest hit is intimately familiar to every classic rock listener, but it is quite a strange song. The lyrics seem like they are talking about ordinary people in ordinary situations, but they don’t add up to any specific identifiable reality. The devil makes an appearance. There are two different characters named Annie and Fanny. The narrator is on the run, but we don’t know from what. There are three different singers, all of whom sound like backwoodsy Muppets. In photos, the musicians look like Civil War re-enactors, or Bushwick hipsters, or rednecks, or academics, or all of the above. In the days before the internet, everything about them was mysterious, from the band name on down.
“The Weight” appeared on an album called Music From Big Pink because it came out of jam sessions that the Band held with Bob Dylan in the basement of Big Pink, a house deep in the forest outside Woodstock, New York. The house is, you guessed it, big and pink. You can rent it! We took my father-in-law to see it, and even though it’s way out in the boonies, we were not the only fans making a pilgrimage there that day.

