Flea
Flea, the common name for the order Siphonaptera, includes 2,500 species of small flightless insects that live as external parasites of mammals and birds. Fleas live by ingesting the blood of their hosts. Adult fleas grow to about 3 millimetres long, are usually dark in color, and have bodies that are "flattened" sideways or narrow, enabling them to move through their hosts' fur or feathers. They lack wings; their hind legs are extremely well adapted for jumping. Their claws keep them from being dislodged, and their mouthparts are adapted for piercing skin and sucking blood. Some species can leap 50 times their body length, a feat second only to jumps made by another group of insects, the superfamily of froghoppers. Flea larvae are worm-like, with no limbs; they have chewing mouthparts and feed on organic debris left on their hosts' skin.
How Critics See Flea
Chorus pulls the clearest critic-consensus signals out of this discography: the highest-rated record, the tightest agreement, the sharpest split, and the best place to start.
Honora
2026
Highest ChoruScore in this discography at 75/100 across 11 reviews.
Flea's Honora opens as a horn-led reckoning, a trumpet-forward record that reorients his public persona toward meditative jazz exploration and intimate collaboration. Across 11 pro...
Honora
2026
Best balance of score, review depth, and critic agreement for a first listen.
Flea's Honora opens as a horn-led reckoning, a trumpet-forward record that reorients his public persona toward meditative jazz exploration and intimate collaboration. Across 11 pro...