Aaron Livingston was born in Los Angeles, California, where his mother was an educator and his father was a man of the cloth. He was still a child when his family moved to Queens, New York, and he became fascinated with the flavors of urban life. After graduating from high school, Livingston studied ,at Columbia University, but dropped out and worked day jobs for a while before relocating to Philadelphia and enrolling at Temple University. While in Philadelphia, he struck up a friendship with members of the Roots, and he guested on their 2011 album Undun; that same year, Livingston collaborated with alternative hip-hop artist Rjd2 in a project they called Icebird, releasing the full-length The Abandoned Lullaby. He soon began recording and releasing digital albums, beginning with Aaron Livingston's Greatest Hits, Vol. -1, but in 2013 he began making music under the name Son Little.
In 2014, Little signed with Anti Records, and in November of that year he dropped a six-song EP entitled Things I Forgot. In April 2015, he produced an EP for legendary gospel and soul singer Mavis Staples, Your Good Fortune; one track from the EP, an interpretation of "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean," won a Grammy Award for Best Roots Performance. October 2015 saw the release of his first solo album, simply titled Son Little. Little toured in support of it, headlining club dates and opening for acts as diverse as Mumford Sons, Shakey Graves, and Kelis. In 2017, he released New Magic, a more organic-sounding set that was largely written on the road and inspired by the experience of performing his songs with a live band on tour. The third Son Little album, 2020's Aloha, found the artist taking on new challenges. Livingston's original songwriting demos for the album were lost when a hard drive burned out, forcing him to rewrite the songs a few weeks before sessions began. It was also his first time recording with an outside producer, Renaud Letang.
As Livingston began writing material for his next album in a cottage in Upstate New York, he began sorting through a box of old notebooks, with some of the writing going back to when he was 9 years old. As he re-read his childhood journals, he found himself struggling with reminders of unresolved trauma, including an episode of sexual abuse. As Livingston dedicated himself to therapy to heal his emotional scars, he investigated a number of options, including Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), somatic healing, and psychedelic microdosing. His journey informed his songwriting process, and as he wrote lyrics and mapped out ideas, he used rhythm programming and recordings apps in his tablet computer to lay down his initial tracks, later going into the studio to add additional instrumentation and mix down the tracks. Like Neptune was released in September 2022, and its release was followed by an international concert tour. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi