Breakingthecode is an eclectic acoustic group with blended harmonies that sings catchy singer-songwriter tunes, including Geza Keller originals, from the 1920s to the modern day. The current members, featured above (left to right), are Tom Borg, Tony de Paolo, Geza Keller and Caitlin Rother.
Geza formed the original breakingthecode (BTC) in 1997 with his former college
roommate Randy Hanson, his coworker and close friend Paul Trygar and another friend, Joe Rosignolo. This motley lineup rose from the ashes of several other bands that had played Geza’s original songs and blues covers, but went dormant for various obscure reasons that only musicians can appreciate.
Geza formed the original breakingthecode (BTC) in 1997 with his former college
roommate Randy Hanson, his coworker and close friend Paul Trygar and another friend, Joe Rosignolo. This motley lineup rose from the ashes of several other bands that had played Geza’s original songs and blues covers, but went dormant for various obscure reasons that only musicians can appreciate.
The band’s
name was inspired by the Broadway play, “Breaking The Code,” the story of how
Alan Turing, the inventor of the original computer, broke the secret code, or
cryptography, produced by the German machine known as “the Enigma,” which laid
out the positions and strategies of battleships and bombings during World War
Two. (The movie “The Imitation Game,” starring Benjamin Cumberbatch, tells this
same story.) Geza saw the play with his mother in New York City , when he lived there in 1987.
Geza was a
precocious troubadour, picking up the guitar when he was 10. Drawing from jazz,
folk and jam rock influences, Geza started writing songs while he was earning a
mathematics degree at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (New
Mexico Tech), which he entered when he was only 16. At the time, his songs were
inspired by the hallucinogenic Peace Movement of the ‘70s, the desolate high-
desert beauty of the chollas and striated rock, and the refuge they offered
from the pressures of family and the modern urban world.
In the
first iteration of BTC, Geza sung lead vocals and rhythm guitar, Randy strummed
a custom-made electric Flying Vee mandolin, Paul banged on the drums, and Joe
played the bass guitar. With the passion and energy of youth, they performed at
showcases of original singer-songwriters throughout Southern
California .
Eighteen months later, Joe left the band, and
after a three-month search, bass player Tom Borg took his place. (In what would
become a trend in BTC, Tom found the band through one of his daughters, who
went to school with Randy’s daughter.)
After
opening for national acts such as NRBQ and John Mayall, BTC caught the eye of
two management companies and soon became a headliner in its own right. But
offered the opportunity to record an album and go on a national tour, Geza had
to decline. He had a nine-year-old son and a newborn to raise, as well as a new
optics company in Santa Ana to run, so he did not have the time or
freedom necessary to go on tour. This decision did not fit with Randy’s goals,
so he too left the band in April 2003.
The next
year was a period of refocusing and rethinking. Original music was a tough sell
in San Diego County , so Geza decided to redirect the
energy of the remaining band members—Geza, Paul and Tom—toward developing a
strong list of crowd-pleasing covers that would draw a bigger audience, but closer
to home.
That led
to the new “Summer of Love” retro dance band known as FakeBook, named after the
generic book of skeletal songs—chords and lyrics—musicians use to pick up and
play together at a moment’s notice. Once Facebook came along, most fans thought
the band name was a play on the social media site, which provided an unexpected
and convenient double entendre.
In 2004,
Tony de Paolo, who played guitar and added a new layer of harmony to the vocals,
joined the band. (Geza met Tony through their sons, who were close friends, and
also played music together. Tony’s wife, Daria, brought her longtime friend Caitlin
Rother to support Tony at his first band gig at a public venue—ever—at The
Ocean House in Carlsbad, and Caitlin subsequently came to more FakeBook gigs
than anyone else over the years.) But just three gigs into the band’s new chapter, Paul
died of a massive heart attack at 53.
For the
next decade or so, FakeBook continued to evolve, adding a new drummer, lead
guitar player and saxophone player, while BTC went into hibernation. FakeBook played mostly covers, also working a few of Geza’s original songs into the mix as it
performed at venues throughout San Diego and Orange Counties, including the
Belly Up in Solana Beach, the Del Mar Fair, the Kraken in Cardiff, Beaumont’s
in La Jolla, The Coyote in Carlsbad, Latitude 33 in San Marcos, Club M at the
Grand Del Mar, 710 Beach Club in PB, and The Tin Roof in the Gaslamp. (Tony
also arranged for FakeBook to play for an audience of 150 people in La Jolla at the launch party for Caitlin’s novel, Naked
Addiction, in 2007.)
As
FakeBook went through its own growing pains, Tony left the band for a while,
but was eventually enticed to come back. In 2015, he brought up an idea that
resonated with Geza and Caitlin, who was now Geza’s girlfriend. (They’d met for
the first time years earlier at Tony’s house in Carlsbad , attended a casual “sing-a-long” at
Tony’s house in Bird Rock some years later, and started dating in 2012.)
“Why don’t
we start playing more of your originals?” Tony said to Geza after a gig at the Del Mar fair, where
FakeBook played live for many years.
Caitlin
independently had been urging Geza to perform his original songs as a solo act
and record them with or without other musicians. In turn, Geza had been urging
Caitlin to sing with him, first in her living room, then for friends and family
at parties. Caitlin, a classically trained pianist and a closet singer, knew
all the FakeBook covers, and by now some of Geza’s originals as well.
Geza took
all of this as a sign that he should resurrect BTC to play acoustic versions of
his originals. Tony said he was in, and even though Tom was already playing with
a couple of other bands, he heartily agreed as well. Geza invited Caitlin to
join too.
While
FakeBook continued to play, albeit on a less frequent basis, BTC began to step
up and rehearse in force, with a woman sharing some of the lead vocals for the
first time in the band’s history.
This
latest iteration of BTC began quietly at first, performing together a couple of
times in Socorro, New Mexico, at Geza’s “49ers” college reunion and also at a
separate annual fundraiser for his college roommate, Victor Saracini, who was
the pilot of the plane that ran into the second tower of the World Trade Center
on 9/11.
Geza and Caitlin also have sung together at numerous private parties, at the Treehouse Cafe on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia, Canada, and at the Hue nightclub in San Francisco at the SPIE annual jams.
Now
retooled as an acoustic group with layered vocal harmonies, breakingthecode
offers a full-bodied blend of classics and originals, with notes of jazz, folk,
rock and blues.
In
addition to the four-decade backlist of Geza’s original songs, BTC also plays a
carefully selected variety of catchy favorite covers written by some of the best
singer-songwriters in musical history, including:
(Updated February 2018)
“Is You Is
or Is You Ain’t My Baby” by Louis Jordan
“Heart
Full of Soul” by The Yardbirds
“Black
Horse and A Cherry Tree” and “Suddenly I See” by K.T. Tunstall
“Why, Georgia ” by
John Mayer
“I Thought
I Knew You” by Matthew Sweet
“Gone,”
“Native Son,” “Thing Called Love” (Bonnie Raitt version) and “Slow Turning” by
John Hiatt
"Something to Talk About" (Bonnie Raitt version) by Shirley Eikhart
"Something to Talk About" (Bonnie Raitt version) by Shirley Eikhart
“I’ll Be
Back Again,” "Two of Us" and "Taxman" by The Beatles
“Sunny” by
Bobby Hebb
"Hazy Shade of Winter" by Simon and Garfunkel
"The Letter" by the Boxtops
"Rock'n'Roll Woman" by Buffalo Springfield
“Angel FromMontgomery ”
by John Prine
"The Letter" by the Boxtops
"Rock'n'Roll Woman" by Buffalo Springfield
“Angel From
“Blueside”
by Rooney
"You Took Advantage of Me" by Rogers and Hart
"You Took Advantage of Me" by Rogers and Hart
"If You Could Only See" by Tonic
“Happy” by Pharrell Williams
"Gold on the Ceiling" and "Lonely Boy" by Black Keys
“Happy” by Pharrell Williams
"Gold on the Ceiling" and "Lonely Boy" by Black Keys
"On a Plain" and "Come As You Are" by Nirvana
“Drive” by Incubus
“Drive” by Incubus
“Won’t
Back Down” by Tom Petty
“Rodeo
Clowns” and "Sitting, Waiting, Wishing" by Jack Johnson
“Black
Velvet” by Alannah Myles
“Handle Me
With Care” by the Traveling Wilburys
“Sunny Afternoon” by the Kinks
"Driver Eight" by REM
"Secret Agent Man" (Johnny Rivers version) by P. Sloan/Steve Barri
"Unchain My Heart" by Bobby Sharp
"Moondance" by Van Morrison
"You Took Advantage of Me" by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart
"You Took Advantage of Me" by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart
Acoustic. Eclectic. Unforgettable.
To add your name to our mailing list, to contact or to book BTC for a gig, please message Caitlin Rother at crother@flash.net.
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