The Text of Festival is an archive album by Hawkwind consisting of BBC sessions and live performances between 1970 and 1971. It was originally released in 1983 after the band had exited their Active Records contract, and has continuously been repackaged and retitled ever since.
The copyright of the recordings on the first disc is owned by the BBC who were not approached for permission for their commercial use, so the legality of this album is questionable. The source tapes used are not from the BBC, but inferior-quality off-air recordings of the broadcast. The recordings have also appeared on The Weird Tapes, Hawkwind, Friends and Relations and Hawkwind Anthology.
"Come Home" is listed on the album following "We Do It", but has never been included on any of the releases of this album. It does appear on the Hawkwind Anthology compilation set.
"The Reason Is?" and "Be Yourself" have never be issued on any of the CD versions.
Later releases erroneously claim that this recording is from the Cambridge Corn Exchange. There is a recording in existence from The Six Hour Technicolor Dream featuring Hawkwind, Pink Fairies and Syd Barrett at the Cambridge Corn Exchange on 27 January 1972, the Hawkwind portion of which was released in 2011 as Leave No Star Unturned (see Discogs entry).
Track 4: Maida Vale, 18 August 1970; Broadcast: Top Gear, 19 September 1970. Tracks originally broadcast from this session: "Hurry on Sundown", "Seeing It As You Really Are" and "Some of That Stuff" [aka "Come Home"].[3]
Track 5–6: Paris Cinema, London, 5 November 1970; Broadcast: John Peel Sunday Concert, 15 November 1970.
Disc 2: Recorded at Colchester Technical College, 19 February 1971 (with Uriah Heep).