I don’t recommend splitting line level signals or long line level runs from consumer gear to the amp unless you happen to have a rather powerful preamp like professionals would use. Consumer hifi is usually underpowered and can sound lifeless in situations driving multiple loads simultaneously or long runs. In any case low capacitance wire is best and given the high impedances ideally you would want low noise interconnect like Canare star Quad wire (to protect from EM interference or audible hum from transformers or AC power). So to add to all the excellent advice from Al - try to ensure you have the lowest capacitance wire you can find within reason - Canare L4E6S would be my choice.
If you are using RCA rather than XLR then you also have a higher chance to get hum with shared line levels (due to ground loops).
Also high impedance inputs will make equipment more susceptible to ground loops. (47k is five times that of 10K impedance and ground loop noise will be commensurately 5 times higher - because ground loops or EM noise has very little current the higher the impedance seen the more noise you hear as the small spurious voltage dissipates less into higher impedance. This is why pro gear can often have beefier preamps and double the voltage output (XLR) and lower impedance devices can be connected to them - it makes the system as a whole have greater noise immunity)