Birth Front Cover

Lyric

Shape Shifter

Echoscape

One day you’ll see the brightest color of all kinds

The ceiling lights of the hospital welcome you to the ritual

In some way I always feel I profoundly found what I meant to find

Your brand new eyes seemed to see me

I came to know what it means to be me

You’re my shape shifter

In the picture your heart flickered

I saw my grandmother in you

One day you’ll meet somebody that you follow your heart to be around

Strangely bounded by the common ground

We took the Greyhound, it was northbound

Then there was the day that you embodied the tidal waves of the east shoreline

When the language was yet to be defined

You already knew how to speak your mind

We collect the same glitter

We filled the sheet with the fake silver

Spilled on your hand was the sand of every hue

One day you’ll realize that you never wanna lose someone

Thirty-eight years I had to say goodbyes

I played it by ear and the song makes me cry

I never had no guiding light

I never thought you could be the one

That’s why I try not to miss your heartbeat

I sing to your melody from the backseat

I carried you down by the river

I chose hope to make it better

Life was new in the year 22

You’re my shape shifter

In the picture your heart flickered

I saw my grandmother in you

  • Lyricist

    Satoshi Inoue

  • Composer

    Satoshi Inoue

  • Producer

    Satoshi Inoue

  • Mixing Engineer

    Satoshi Inoue

  • Mastering Engineer

    Satoshi Inoue

  • Guitar

    Satoshi Inoue

  • Vocals

    Satoshi Inoue

Birth Front Cover

Listen to Shape Shifter by Echoscape

Streaming / Download

  • 1

    The Land

    Echoscape

  • 2

    Harmonic Voices of the Subway

    Echoscape

  • 3

    Good Life

    Echoscape

  • 4

    To See You

    Echoscape

  • ⚫︎

    Shape Shifter

    Echoscape

On this five-track EP, Echoscape, the math rock project led by Satoshi Inoue, moves between precision and restraint. Interlocking guitar lines form asymmetrical patterns, leaving space for quieter melodic fragments to emerge. English and Japanese lyrics appear less as narrative anchors than as subtle textures, as the songs trace small emotional contours shaped by both math rock intricacy and indie folk intimacy.

Artist Profile

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