The third studio album from Texas-based, post-grunge/emo-metal outfit
Flyleaf is also the band's last outing with longtime vocalist
Lacey Sturm, who announced her amicable departure from the group just prior to New Horizons' street date. More streamlined than 2009's erratic, yet electrifying
Memento Mori,
Sturm's last hurrah with the band boasts some truly sublime moments early on, effectively capturing the essence of what makes
Flyleaf so compelling. "Fire Fire," with its mammoth chorus and barely contained rage, makes for a stunning opener, utilizing every facet of
Sturm's formidable howl while allowing the band the freedom to punctuate those caterwauls with meticulously crafted sonic blasts that never sacrifice melody for power. When holding true to those tactics, as they do on stand-out cuts like "Cage on the Ground" and the soaring title track,
Flyleaf manages to transcend the many trappings of the genre (clean verse/explosive chorus/rinse/repeat) by masterfully exploiting them. Heavier, less immediate offerings like "Green Heart" and the gargantuan "Freedom" impress as well, revealing a nervy, studious musicality that many of the group's contemporaries lack. ~ James Christopher Monger