Not long after the 1970 festival, little-known country singer Paul Wilson recorded a song called "Hippie Invasion" about what he considered to be the seamier side of the festival crowds, which was released on a 45 rpm record by Country Town Records. In 1971, Savage Grace, one of the bands who performed at the festival, released their second album,
Savage Grace 2, which contained "Macon, Georgia", a song they had written about some of their festival experiences. Also in 1971, Columbia Records released a triple-LP record album called
The First Great Rock Festivals of the Seventies, featuring tracks by numerous artists recorded live at both the Second Atlanta International Pop Festival and the
Isle of Wight Festival. The album went on to reach number 47 on the
Billboard 200 album chart that same year. Jimi Hendrix's Atlanta Pop Festival performance was recorded and eleven songs from his set were later released as one of the four CDs in a 1991 box set called
Stages, a release featuring one live performance from each of the four years of Hendrix's short but high-profile career. In 2003, The Allman Brothers Band released a recording of their festival opening and closing performances,
Live at the Atlanta International Pop Festival: July 3 & 5, 1970. In February 2014, Columbia/Legacy released a 4-CD box set,
True to the Blues: The Johnny Winter Story, which features three tracks recorded live at the festival, two of which were previously unreleased. In 2015, a more complete recording of sixteen of the songs in Jimi Hendrix's set, with improved audio quality, was released as a double CD and a separate double vinyl LP package called
Freedom: Atlanta Pop Festival. The liner notes for this double album estimate attendance numbers for Hendrix's festival performance at around 200,000. ==Festival poster==