Sly Stone Turned Isolation Into Inspiration, Forging A Path For A Generation Of Music-Makers
The charismatic front man of Sly and the Family Stone died on June 9, 2025, at the age of 82. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
BY JOSE VALENTINO RUIZASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MUSIC
BUSINESS AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP,
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
In the fall of 1971, Sly and the Family Stoneās āThereās a Riot Goinā Onā landed like a quiet revolution. After two years of silence following the bandās mainstream success, fans expected more feel-good funk from the ensemble.
What they got instead was something murkier and more fractured, yet deeply intimate and experimental. This was not just an album; it was the sound of a restless mind rebuilding music from the inside out.
At the center of it all was front man Sly Stone.
Long before the home studio became an industry norm, Stone, who died on June 9, 2025, turned the studio into both a sanctuary and an instrument. And long before sampling defined the sound of hip-hop, he was using tape and machine rhythms to deconstruct existing songs to cobble together new ones.
As someone who spends much of their time working on remote recording and audio production ā from building full arrangements solo to collaborating digitally across continents ā Iām deeply indebted to Sly Stoneās approach to making music.
He was among the first major artists to fully embrace the recording environment as a space to compose rather than perform. Every reverb bounce, every drum machine tick, every overdubbed breath became part of the writing process.
From studio rat to bedroom producer
Sly and the Family Stoneās early albums ā including āDance to the Musicā and āStand!ā ā were recorded at top-tier facilities like CBS Studios in Los Angeles under the technical guidance of engineers such as Don Puluse and with oversight from producer David Rubinson.
These sessions yielded bright, radio-friendly tracks that emphasized tight horn sections, group vocals and a polished sound. Producers also prized the energy of live performance, so the full band would record together in real time.
But by the early 1970s, Stone was burnt out. The dual pressures of fame and industry demands were becoming too much. Struggling with cocaine and PCP addiction, heād grown increasingly distrustful of bandmates, label executives and even his friends.
So he decided to retreat to his hillside mansion in Bel Air, California, transforming his home into a musical bunker. Inside, he could work on his own terms: isolated and erratic, but free.
Without a full band present, Stone became a one-man ensemble. He leaned heavily into overdubbing ā recording one instrument at a time and building his songs from fragments. Using multiple tape machines, heād layer each part onto previous takes.
The resulting album, āThereās a Riot Goinā On,ā was like nothing heād previously recorded. It sounds murky, jagged and disjointed. But itās also deeply intentional, as if every imperfection was part of the design.
In āThe Poetics of Rock,ā musicologist Albin Zak describes this ācomposerlyā approach to production, where recording itself becomes a form of writing, not just documentation. Stoneās process for āThereās a Riot Goinā Onā reflects this mindset: Each overdub, rhythm loop and sonic imperfection functions more like a brushstroke than a performance.
Automating the groove
A key part of Stoneās tool kit was the Maestro Rhythm King, a preset drum machine he used extensively.
It wasnāt the first rhythm box on the market. But Stoneās use of it was arguably the first time such a machine shaped the entire aesthetic of a mainstream album. The drum parts on his track āFamily Affair,ā for example, donāt swing ā they tick. What might have been viewed as soulless became its own kind of soul.
This early embrace of mechanical rhythm prefigured what would later become a foundation of hip-hop and electronic music. In his book āDawn of the DAW,ā music technology scholar Adam Patrick Bell calls this shift āa redefinition of groove,ā noting how drum machines like the Rhythm King encouraged musicians to rethink their songwriting process, building tracks in shorter, repeatable sections while emphasizing steady, looped rhythms rather than free-flowing performances.
Though samplers wouldnāt emerge until years later, Stoneās work already contained that repetition, layering and loop-based construction that would become characteristic of the practice.
He recorded his own parts the way future DJs would splice records ā isolated, reshuffled, rhythmically obsessed. His overdubbed bass lines, keyboard vamps and vocal murmurs often sounded like puzzle pieces from other songs.
Music scholar Will Fulton, in his study of Black studio innovation, notes how producers like Stone helped pioneer a fragment-based approach to music-making that would become central to hip-hopās DNA. Stoneās process anticipated the mentality that a song isnāt necessarily something written top to bottom, but something assembled, brick by brick, from whatās available.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Stoneās tracks have been sampled relentlessly. In āBring That Beat Back,ā music critic Nate Patrin identifies Stone as one of the most sample-friendly artists of the 1970s ā not because of his commercial hits, but because of how much sonic space he left in his tracks: the open-ended grooves, unusual textures and slippery emotional tone.
You can hear his sounds in famous tracks such as 2Pacās āIf My Homie Calls,ā which samples āSing a Simple Songā; A Tribe Called Questās āThe Jam,ā which draws from āFamily Affairā; and De La Soulās āPlug Tuninā,ā which flips āYou Can Make It If You Try.ā
The studio as instrument
While Slyās approach was groundbreaking, he wasnāt entirely alone. Around the same time, artists such as Brian Wilson and The Rolling Stones were experimenting with home and nontraditional recording environments ā Wilson famously retreating to his home studio during āPet Sounds,ā and the Stones tracking āExile on Main St.ā in a French villa.
Yet in the world of Black music, production remained largely centralized in institutionally controlled studio systems such as Motown in Detroit and Stax in Memphis, where sound was tightly managed by in-house producers and engineers. In that context, Stoneās decision to isolate, self-produce and dismantle the standard workflow was more than a technical choice: It was a radical act of autonomy.
The rise of home recording didnāt just change who could make music. It changed what music felt like. It made music more internal, iterative and intimate.
Sly Stone helped invent that feeling.
Itās easy to hear āThereās a Riot Goinā Onā as murky or uneven. The mix is dense with tape hiss, drum machines drift in and out of sync, and vocals often feel buried or half-whispered.
But itās also, in a way, prophetic.
It anticipated the aesthetics of bedroom pop, the cut-and-paste style of modern music software, the shuffle of playlists and the recycling of sounds that defines sample culture. It showed that a groove didnāt need to be spontaneous to be soulful, and that solitude could be a powerful creative tool, not a limitation.
In my own practice, I often record alone, passing files back and forth, building from templates and mapping rhythm to grid ā as do millions of musical artists who compose tracks from their bedrooms, closets and garages.
Half a century ago, a funk pioneer led the way. I think itās safe to say that Sly Stone quietly changed the process of making music forever ā and in the funkiest way possible.
In the fall of 1971, Sly and the Family Stoneās āThereās a Riot Goinā Onā landed like a quiet revolution. After two years of silence following the bandās mainstream success, fans expected more feel-good funk from the ensemble.
What they got instead was something murkier and more fractured, yet deeply intimate and experimental. This was not just an album; it was the sound of a restless mind rebuilding music from the inside out.
At the center of it all was front man Sly Stone.
Long before the home studio became an industry norm, Stone, who died on June 9, 2025, turned the studio into both a sanctuary and an instrument. And long before sampling defined the sound of hip-hop, he was using tape and machine rhythms to deconstruct existing songs to cobble together new ones.
As someone who spends much of their time working on remote recording and audio production ā from building full arrangements solo to collaborating digitally across continents ā Iām deeply indebted to Sly Stoneās approach to making music.
He was among the first major artists to fully embrace the recording environment as a space to compose rather than perform. Every reverb bounce, every drum machine tick, every overdubbed breath became part of the writing process.
From studio rat to bedroom producer
Sly and the Family Stoneās early albums ā including āDance to the Musicā and āStand!ā ā were recorded at top-tier facilities like CBS Studios in Los Angeles under the technical guidance of engineers such as Don Puluse and with oversight from producer David Rubinson.
These sessions yielded bright, radio-friendly tracks that emphasized tight horn sections, group vocals and a polished sound. Producers also prized the energy of live performance, so the full band would record together in real time.
But by the early 1970s, Stone was burnt out. The dual pressures of fame and industry demands were becoming too much. Struggling with cocaine and PCP addiction, heād grown increasingly distrustful of bandmates, label executives and even his friends.
So he decided to retreat to his hillside mansion in Bel Air, California, transforming his home into a musical bunker. Inside, he could work on his own terms: isolated and erratic, but free.
Without a full band present, Stone became a one-man ensemble. He leaned heavily into overdubbing ā recording one instrument at a time and building his songs from fragments. Using multiple tape machines, heād layer each part onto previous takes.
The resulting album, āThereās a Riot Goinā On,ā was like nothing heād previously recorded. It sounds murky, jagged and disjointed. But itās also deeply intentional, as if every imperfection was part of the design.
In āThe Poetics of Rock,ā musicologist Albin Zak describes this ācomposerlyā approach to production, where recording itself becomes a form of writing, not just documentation. Stoneās process for āThereās a Riot Goinā Onā reflects this mindset: Each overdub, rhythm loop and sonic imperfection functions more like a brushstroke than a performance.
Automating the groove
A key part of Stoneās tool kit was the Maestro Rhythm King, a preset drum machine he used extensively.
It wasnāt the first rhythm box on the market. But Stoneās use of it was arguably the first time such a machine shaped the entire aesthetic of a mainstream album. The drum parts on his track āFamily Affair,ā for example, donāt swing ā they tick. What might have been viewed as soulless became its own kind of soul.
This early embrace of mechanical rhythm prefigured what would later become a foundation of hip-hop and electronic music. In his book āDawn of the DAW,ā music technology scholar Adam Patrick Bell calls this shift āa redefinition of groove,ā noting how drum machines like the Rhythm King encouraged musicians to rethink their songwriting process, building tracks in shorter, repeatable sections while emphasizing steady, looped rhythms rather than free-flowing performances.
Though samplers wouldnāt emerge until years later, Stoneās work already contained that repetition, layering and loop-based construction that would become characteristic of the practice.
He recorded his own parts the way future DJs would splice records ā isolated, reshuffled, rhythmically obsessed. His overdubbed bass lines, keyboard vamps and vocal murmurs often sounded like puzzle pieces from other songs.
Music scholar Will Fulton, in his study of Black studio innovation, notes how producers like Stone helped pioneer a fragment-based approach to music-making that would become central to hip-hopās DNA. Stoneās process anticipated the mentality that a song isnāt necessarily something written top to bottom, but something assembled, brick by brick, from whatās available.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Stoneās tracks have been sampled relentlessly. In āBring That Beat Back,ā music critic Nate Patrin identifies Stone as one of the most sample-friendly artists of the 1970s ā not because of his commercial hits, but because of how much sonic space he left in his tracks: the open-ended grooves, unusual textures and slippery emotional tone.
You can hear his sounds in famous tracks such as 2Pacās āIf My Homie Calls,ā which samples āSing a Simple Songā; A Tribe Called Questās āThe Jam,ā which draws from āFamily Affairā; and De La Soulās āPlug Tuninā,ā which flips āYou Can Make It If You Try.ā
The studio as instrument
While Slyās approach was groundbreaking, he wasnāt entirely alone. Around the same time, artists such as Brian Wilson and The Rolling Stones were experimenting with home and nontraditional recording environments ā Wilson famously retreating to his home studio during āPet Sounds,ā and the Stones tracking āExile on Main St.ā in a French villa.
Yet in the world of Black music, production remained largely centralized in institutionally controlled studio systems such as Motown in Detroit and Stax in Memphis, where sound was tightly managed by in-house producers and engineers. In that context, Stoneās decision to isolate, self-produce and dismantle the standard workflow was more than a technical choice: It was a radical act of autonomy.
The rise of home recording didnāt just change who could make music. It changed what music felt like. It made music more internal, iterative and intimate.
Sly Stone helped invent that feeling.
Itās easy to hear āThereās a Riot Goinā Onā as murky or uneven. The mix is dense with tape hiss, drum machines drift in and out of sync, and vocals often feel buried or half-whispered.
But itās also, in a way, prophetic.
It anticipated the aesthetics of bedroom pop, the cut-and-paste style of modern music software, the shuffle of playlists and the recycling of sounds that defines sample culture. It showed that a groove didnāt need to be spontaneous to be soulful, and that solitude could be a powerful creative tool, not a limitation.
In my own practice, I often record alone, passing files back and forth, building from templates and mapping rhythm to grid ā as do millions of musical artists who compose tracks from their bedrooms, closets and garages.
Half a century ago, a funk pioneer led the way. I think itās safe to say that Sly Stone quietly changed the process of making music forever ā and in the funkiest way possible.
READ ORIGINAL STORY HERE
Comments