Echo lives in your menu bar, quietly keeping track of everything you play. Most of the time you won't think about it. Then you'll want to get back to that podcast episode, or that album you half-listened to on Tuesday, and that's when the shortcut earns its place.
What Does the Echo Shortcut Do?
Pressing ⌘⇧E opens Echo's search palette over whatever you are currently doing. It doesn't matter if you're in a spreadsheet, reading a document, or mid-sentence in a message. The palette appears immediately on top, ready for you to type.
From the palette you can:
- Search your listening history by title, artist, album, or podcast name
- Browse recent plays without typing anything
- Select any result and resume it at the exact position you stopped
Press Escape or click away and the palette disappears, returning you exactly where you were. Nothing is interrupted. You don't lose your place in whatever you were working on.
The shortcut is global, meaning it fires even when Echo is not in focus. You never need to click the menu bar icon first.
How to Use It Day to Day
The typical pattern takes about three seconds:
- Press
⌘⇧Ewherever you are - Type a word or two from what you want to find
- Press
Returnon the result
Echo matches against everything in your history, so you can be vague. A fragment of an artist name, a word from the title, even a partial album name will surface the right result. If you played something in the last day or two, it's likely near the top without any typing at all.
The resume behaviour is the part that changes how you listen. Most players start a track from the beginning when you re-open it. Echo returns you to the exact moment you stopped, whether that's twelve minutes into an episode or halfway through a record. The shortcut is the door; the timestamp is waiting on the other side.
How to Rebind the Shortcut
The default is ⌘⇧E, chosen because it's quick to reach and unlikely to clash with common app shortcuts. If it does clash with something you use, or you'd simply prefer a different combination, you can change it in Echo's settings.
Open Echo's settings from the menu bar icon and look for the keyboard shortcut section. Click the current shortcut field and press whatever key combination you'd like to use instead. Echo validates the new binding immediately and starts using it straight away, with no restart needed.
Three-key combinations starting with Command and Shift tend to be safe territory on macOS. They're fast to press and most apps leave them free. Avoid single-key or two-key shortcuts, which are almost always claimed by something.
Why a Shortcut and Not a Menu Click?
You could click the Echo icon in the menu bar every time. It works. But a click requires you to move your hand to the trackpad, find the icon, and aim. If you're in the middle of typing, that context switch adds friction that slowly trains you to bother less often.
A keyboard shortcut fires from the home row. You're already there. The cost of checking your listening history drops to almost nothing, which means you'll actually do it. Small reductions in friction compound over time into different habits.
That's the design logic behind putting everything behind a command palette: one thing to remember, always available, fast enough that you don't have to justify the interruption. ⌘⇧E then type, then done.
What the Shortcut Doesn't Do
The shortcut opens the search palette. It doesn't control playback directly, skip tracks, or adjust volume. Those controls live in your media player. Echo's job is history and resumption, not playback control. Keep the shortcut mental model simple: press it when you want to find something you played before.
Frequently asked
What is the default Echo keyboard shortcut?
Can I change the Echo keyboard shortcut?
Does the shortcut work when Echo is not in focus?
What happens when I select a result in the Echo palette?
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