The group released their debut album,
Things We Do on Pachyderm Records in 1998. In 1999, Indigenous won three
Native American Music Awards for their debut record, including two top honors: Album of the Year and Group of the Year. The track "Now That You're Gone" peaked at #22 on
Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart.
Amazon.com named the band Blues Artist of the Year, and soon after they were featured on broadcast shows such as
NPR's "
All Things Considered", "
Late Night with Conan O'Brien," "
CBS Saturday Morning," and "
Austin City Limits". B.B. King became a self-proclaimed fan, and invited the band to join his Blues Festival Tour. Later that year, Indigenous released an EP,
Blues This Morning, and an album,
Live at Pachyderm Studios in 1999, and continued the momentum.
Live at Pachyderm won two Native American Music Awards for Best Blues Album and Group of the Year in 2000. Their next LP,
Circle, settled into place in
Billboards
Top Blues Albums Chart after its release in 2000. Following this was the 2003 self-titled album,
Indigenous (
Zomba), and then another EP,
Long Way Home in 2005 (on their own record label). This seven-song EP contains five originals, as well as an acoustic version of a song from
Things We Do, "Rest Of My Days", and a live version of their first single, "Things We Do". After recording their 2006 album,
Chasing the Sun (
Vanguard) the band split. Mato carried on with the Indigenous name and toured with a new line-up that included bassist Chaney Bryant and drummer
Ray Mehlbaum in support of the album. In 2008, Mato wrote and recorded the album
Broken Lands which was released on August 12, 2008. More recently, the band released
The Acoustic Sessions on June 8, 2010.
Time is Coming (2014) was described in reviews as "closer to rock than blues." This follows the last CD entitled
Vanishing Americans (2012) that paid homage to Mato's father, Greg Zephier Sr. It is dedicated to indigenous youth and all young people on indigenous reservations. His 10th commercial album,
Vanishing Americans, released on
Blues Bureau International, a division of the
Shrapnel Record Group, won the Native American Music Award's "Album of the Year" award in 2014. The CD honored Zephier, who was a spiritual advisor and spokesperson for the International Indian Treaty Council. Nanji said this about Greg, "he was my favorite musician...I just felt it was time to pay tribute to him and his band." ==Discography and awards==