About

Lines of Silence are an experimental kosmische band from the stranger reaches of North West England. LOS combine experimental analogue and digital electronics, motorik beats, improvisation and drone rock guitar explosions to create an immersive, expansive and contemporary take on psychedelia.

LOS has been covered and reviewed in print and online publications, including Electronic Sound, Louder Than War, Fresh on the Net and Moonbuilding and International Times. Our tracks have featured on various radio stations, including on BBC6 Music’s Riley & Coe and The Freak Zone shows.

Formed in 2020 as a side project for David Little, LOS expanded into a loose collective of like-minded musicians, often playing improvised live sets. Lines of Silence currently features David Little, Manchester’s experimental electronics legend Dave Clarkson and Andrea Parra.

Following the release of the low-key drone album Terra/Aqua in 2020, LOS embarked on the Stations of the Sun project – releasing a set of long form soundscapes reflecting on our relationship with the natural world on the dates of the solstices and equinoxes 2020-21. An edited collection of these was released in 2022 as Stations of the Sun (Dimple Discs).

Jamming with Jean-Hervé Peron and Amaury Cambuzat from kraut-legends FaUSt at the base of the Pyrenees in 2023 re-energised LOS and set the band’s controls for different – and stranger – destinations. Following a support slot for Amaury’s I Feel Like a Bombed Cathedral project in late 2023, LOS finalised their third album, The Long Way Home (Analogue Trash, 2024). Electronic Sound magazine described the album as, “a work that is wholly unpredictable and oddly comforting”.

In May 2026 Lines of Silence release their new album, Lines in Opposition! on Sprechen. Their fourth album, but also an album of firsts – first vinyl release, the first to feature vocals (Andrea Parra on the title track and Transcendental Radiation) and also the first to feature a guest spot by Pete Collins (Hawaii Worms, Flange Circus) on bass on psych-rocker Kinetik. Lines in Opposition! highlights the eclectic nature of the band with tracks from pounding motorik juggernauts to experimental electronica, dub, psych rock and ambient. As the name suggests, Lines of Silence are a band charting their own path and refusing to be pigeonholed by genre.

Reviews and testimonials

“I love this one [Lines in Opposition]. I find that pounding repetition just entices movement while those really dreamy vocals lure you into an almost like a trance, it’s magnificent.”

Christian Carlisle, BBC Introducting – Leeds and Sheffield

“I LOVE IT!’

Kavus Torabi (Gong, Utopia Strong, Cardiacs) on Transcendental Radiation

“The ever-evolving Todmorden-based outfit utilise guitars, electronics and a whole heap of pedals to deliver driving kosmische instrumentals and heart-racing post rock. Fittingly for the night, I can absolutely imagine the duo playing The Roadhouse. It’s a sound that simply oozes effortless cool. Halfway into the set, the feedback-laced psych gives way to hazy melancholia. The sound of waves lapping gently against the shore as we fall ever deeper under their spell.”

Louder Than War, review of Live Inside a Dream, July 2025

“There’s a proper krauty vibe throughout and it crackles and purrs in the all right places – [The Long Way Home] is great stuff, a proper record that should be listened to from start to finish.”

Moonbuilding Magazine, August 2024, review of the Long Way Home LP

Included in Electronic Sound Magazine’s 101 underground electronic artists on Bandcamp, January 2025

‘Album of the Year: Lines Of Silence stole our ambient-psych hearts with The Long Way Home, released on Todmorden label AnalogueTrash. ‘

Dirty Sunbeams, review of 2024

‘As the dynamics shift down, the band narrative holds firm – Lines Of Silence maintain a distinct vision across a spectrum of tempos. From motorik belters to moonlit transcendence, The Long Way Home is a cohesive, colourful odyssey.’

Dirty Sunbeams, review of the Long Way Home

‘[The Long Way home is] a work that is both wholly unpredictable and also oddly comforting. The 21 minute long opus Withens Clough is the standout, with the hypnotic minimal bleeps and breathy pads that dominate its first section coming to to feel like the presence of an old friend the more you listen.’

Imogen Bebb, Electronic Sound Magazine – review of The Long Way Home LP

‘The Long Way Home is a celebration of the twists and turns of the journey, the wrong turns and false starts as well as the joy in reaching the destination’. Thanks to its Autobahn-like sense of adventure, The Long Way Home could hardly be a better realisation of that thesis.

Poppy Bristow, Fresh On the Net review of The Long Way Home EP