In 2000, the band Queensrÿche went on a break after finishing a 6-month tour in support of Q2K. Drummer Scott Rockenfield and guitarist Kelly Gray, who played in Queensrÿche at that time, were discussing what to do.[3] Gray had worked with Brother Cane on a project, and remained close to singer and guitarist Damon Johnson and bassist Roman Glick.[4][5] He called Johnson in the summer of 2000,[6] and suggested he give Rockenfield a call.[5] Rockenfield knew of the band, but had never met them.[3]
The name "Slave to the System" describes the effect of corporate minds on an artist's music,[7] and hints at the band members' dissatisfaction with the record industry,[5] as Rockenfield describes: "Every one of us was getting tired of being a 'slave' to the corporate system".[8] The name was coined by Gray even before the band members first met.[7]
Slave to the System independently released their album Slave to the System in 2002.[2] The band played one show in Tennessee and another Seattle after this release.[2][9] In February 2004,[10] Heard left for undisclosed reasons, and they continued as a four-piece.[2]
In 2005, Slave to the System were signed to Spitfire Records, who had the album remixed and remastered, and released it on February 21, 2006.[2][4] In 2006, Johnson said the band's second album was already completed, but to date, it has remained unreleased.[2] "Stigmata" was released as a single, and peaked at 33 in both the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks and Mainstream Rock categories.[5] In support of the release, the band performed 19 shows in the American South and Midwest between February and April of that year.[2][9][11] Due to prior commitments with other bands, other musicians filled in for Glick and Rockenfield on some of the shows.[9]
In 2008, the band released two new songs via MySpace, titled "Freak" and "Who I Am Today". They have been on hiatus since.