Modeliste has released three studio albums and a live album as a leader. His first album titled
Zigaboo.com was released in 2000. His second album ''I'm on the Right Track'' was released in 2004 and features contributors
Dr. John and
Bernie Worrell. In 2007 he contributed to a tribute album honoring
Fats Domino with the song "I'm Gonna Be a Wheel Someday" with collaborators
Herbie Hancock and Renard Poche. His live album titled
Funk Me Hard Live was released in 2009. The drum heavy performance was recorded in 1980 with Modeliste performing with his first post-Meters band, the Gaboon's Gang, at the
Saenger Theatre. His third studio album
New Life was released in 2011. The album features works by several artists including
Wardell Quezergue and
George Porter. In 2005 he recorded with
Young Gunz on the
BMI award-winning song "Can't Stop Won't Stop", and his drum patterns were sampled on the percussion heavy Grammy nominated song "
1 Thing". In 2011 producer-musician
Mark Ronson collaborated with Modeliste,
Erykah Badu,
Mos Def and
Trombone Shorty for the song "A La Modeliste", which was named for Modeliste's influence on funk drumming and the New Orleans sound. He was the featured artist in the August 2013 issue of
Modern Drummer magazine. In the 1980s Modeliste moved to Los Angeles and later to the San Francisco Bay Area, settling in
Oakland, California. Having been involved in disputes over publishing rights of the Meters recordings, he got involved in the business side of the music industry. He started a record label, JZM Records, and a music publishing company, Jomod Music. He performs regularly in the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, and New Orleans. ==Legacy and influence==