Kam Lee
Kam Lee (born Barney Kamalani Lee; October 31, 1966) is an American death metal vocalist, drummer, and a pioneering figure in the genre's development.[1][2] Born in Honolulu, Hawaii, Lee began his musical career in the early 1980s as a drummer and vocalist for Mantas, the precursor band to Death, where he contributed to early demos that helped shape the sound of death metal.[1][3] He is widely credited with innovating the "death growl" or "primordial growl" vocal style, drawing influences from bands like Hellhammer, Venom, and Possessed, which became a defining element of extreme metal vocals starting in the mid-1980s.[4][1] Lee's most prominent role came with Massacre, which he joined in 1985 and has fronted on and off since, including vocals on their seminal 1991 debut album From Beyond, the 2024 release Necrolution, and further projects in 2025 such as the EP Mermaid in a Manhole.[3][4][1] Over his career, he has performed with numerous bands, including Bone Gnawer, The Grotesquery, and Kauldron, solidifying his status as one of the most influential vocalists in American death metal.[1][3]Early life
Childhood and move to Florida
Kam Lee was born Barney Kamalani Lee on October 31, 1966, in Honolulu, Hawaii.[1] Information on his family background and childhood in Hawaii remains limited, with few public details available about his early years there. Lee relocated to Florida during his youth, growing up primarily in South Florida, particularly Broward and Dade counties, through the 1970s and 1980s, a time when he navigated social challenges stemming from his mixed Pacific Islander, Asian, and Irish heritage.[5] His family later moved to the Orlando suburbs, and he also resided in the Tampa area (Brandon). This relocation immersed him in Florida's emerging heavy metal and punk scenes, particularly the vibrant punk scene in South Florida, where local radio stations and record stores provided his initial exposure to the music that would define his career.[6]Initial musical interests
Kam Lee's fascination with heavy metal emerged during his high school years in Florida, initially rooted in the punk scene before evolving toward darker, heavier sounds. As a teenager, he was drawn to the raw aggression of bands like Venom and Hellhammer, whose extreme styles profoundly shaped his early musical worldview.[7] This period marked a shift from punk influences such as the Misfits and Plasmatics to the burgeoning extreme metal underground, facilitated by tape trading among peers in South Florida.[6] Growing up in Broward and Dade counties after his family's move to Florida, Lee self-taught drums and began experimenting with vocals, emulating the ferocious delivery of Venom's Cronos and Hellhammer's Tom G. Warrior—later of Celtic Frost.[6] His early drumming ambitions were inspired by punk's fast-paced energy, while his vocal approach developed through high-pitched screams drawn from thrash and early black metal acts. Around age 16, he adopted the stage name "Kam Lee," shortening his given middle name Kamalani from his birth name Barney Kamalani Lee.[3] Lee actively immersed himself in South Florida's vibrant punk and emerging metal scenes, attending local shows such as a Battalion of Saints gig and jamming covers of Venom songs with friends in garages and informal settings.[6] These experiences, including connections made in high school art class with like-minded metal enthusiasts, fueled his passion and laid the groundwork for his future contributions to the genre.[6]Musical career
Formative years with Mantas and Death
In 1983, Kam Lee co-founded the band Mantas in Orlando, Florida, with guitarist Chuck Schuldiner and guitarist Rick Rozz, marking his entry into the professional music scene as a drummer and co-vocalist.[8] The trio rehearsed in Schuldiner's garage, initially covering songs by Venom while developing original material characterized by aggressive riffs and growling vocals.[6] This early collaboration laid the groundwork for the emerging death metal sound in the local underground circuit. Mantas recorded their debut demo, Death by Metal, in July 1984, a lo-fi effort captured live in a garage setting with Lee handling both drums and vocals on tracks that showcased primitive yet ferocious extreme metal. Later that year, amid growing tensions and a desire for a more ominous identity, Schuldiner renamed the band Death, retaining Lee and Rozz in the lineup.[9] Under the new moniker, they produced the Reign of Terror demo in November 1984, where Lee's dual role continued to define the band's raw, horror-infused intensity through songs like "Corpse Grinder" and "Death's Head."[10] The band maintained momentum into 1985, recording the Infernal Death demo in March at Rhythm Studios in Tampa, Florida, featuring Lee's final contributions as drummer and vocalist on tracks such as "Infernal Death" and "Voodoo."[3] This release captured Death's evolving brutality, influenced briefly by the dark, thrash-infused aesthetics of Venom and Celtic Frost. Throughout this period, Death performed energetically in Florida's burgeoning underground scene, including shows at Ruby's Pub in Brandon on September 11, 1984, and multiple gigs in Tampa and Orlando venues, where they built a cult following among local metal enthusiasts despite rudimentary production values.[11][12] Lee's tenure with Death ended later in 1985 after the Infernal Death sessions, as Schuldiner disbanded the initial lineup amid creative shifts and personal conflicts, leading Lee and Rozz to pursue new projects.[6] This departure marked the close of Lee's formative involvement in pioneering the death metal genre through these raw, demo-driven experiments.[13]Breakthrough with Massacre
Massacre was formed in 1984 in Tampa, Florida, initially by drummer Bill Andrews and guitarist Allen West as a speed metal outfit playing covers.[14] In 1985, vocalist Kam Lee and guitarist Rick Rozz joined the band, followed by bassist Terry Butler, shifting the sound toward death metal and establishing the classic lineup that defined its early sound.[14] The group quickly gained underground traction through the tape-trading scene, releasing their debut demo Aggressive Tyrant in 1986, which featured raw tracks like the title song and showcased Lee's guttural vocal delivery echoing his work on early Death demos.[15] Additional demos followed, building hype that led to a signing with Earache Records. The band's breakthrough came with their debut album From Beyond, recorded in late 1990 at Morrisound Recording Studio in Tampa with producer Scott Burns and released in 1991.[16] Featuring the core lineup of Lee, Rozz, Butler, and Andrews, the album captured the raw aggression of Florida's death metal scene, with tracks blending blistering riffs, thunderous drums, and Lee's pioneering deep, growling vocals that became a genre staple.[16] Earache's support propelled From Beyond to cult status, enabling tours including European dates in 1991, such as appearances at the Death Metal Massacre Festival in the UK, where Massacre shared stages with peers like Carcass and Napalm Death.[14] However, internal tensions and label disputes led to the band's hiatus in 1992, with Rozz briefly reforming a version without Lee that released Promise in 1996.[16] Massacre reformed in 2006 under Lee's leadership, reuniting with Butler alongside guitarist Steve Swanson, drummer Sam Williams, and second guitarist Marcho Michael for a series of U.S. shows celebrating the From Beyond legacy.[14] This lineup undertook the "Re-Animated" European tour in late 2007, performing exclusively From Beyond and Inhuman Condition EP material across 20 dates in Germany, the UK, and beyond, supported by Lee's side project Denial Fiend.[17] Subsequent years saw frequent lineup shifts, including departures of Swanson and Williams by 2008, with temporary additions like drummer Curtis Beeson; by 2011, Lee fronted a variant at the A Day of Death Festival in New York, playing the full debut album.[18] In 2016, Lee rejoined forces with Rozz for a tenth-incarnation revival initially dubbed Massacre X, incorporating guitarist Mike Mazzonetto and a rotating rhythm section, which reverted to the Massacre name in 2017 with Butler's return.[19] This era included U.S. club tours and European festival slots up to 2018, such as Maryland Deathfest, solidifying Massacre's enduring draw despite the instability.[20]Later projects and collaborations
In the mid-2000s, Kam Lee co-founded the death metal band Denial Fiend in Florida, recruiting bassist Terry Butler (ex-Massacre, ex-Death) and other veterans from the scene.[21] The group released their debut full-length album, They Rise, in 2007 through Deepsend Records, blending old-school death metal with horror-themed lyrics and aggressive grooves.[22] Lee's signature death growls, honed during his Massacre era, anchored the band's sound on tracks like "Hell Asylum."[23] Lee expanded his collaborative efforts in 2008 by joining Bone Gnawer, a Swedish-American death metal project led by Rogga Johansson (Necrophobic, Paganizer).[24] The band's self-titled debut EP arrived in 2012 via Butchered Records, featuring Lee's guttural vocals over raw, grinding riffs inspired by early Swedish death metal. This release marked a shift toward more international partnerships for Lee, emphasizing thematic brutality in songs like "Carnal Cravings." In 2009, Lee and Johansson launched The Grotesquery, a horror-conceptual death metal outfit drawing from classic monster films and gothic lore.[25] Their debut album, Tales from the Coffin Born, emerged in 2010 on Cyclone Empire Records, with Lee delivering narrative-driven growls across tracks evoking zombie apocalypses and undead tales.[26] Follow-up efforts like The Death Vortex (2013) continued this cinematic approach, solidifying the duo's chemistry. Lee's involvement in additional projects proliferated through the 2010s, showcasing his versatility within underground death metal circles. He provided vocals for Broken Gravestones' 2010 demo and their 2011 EP Let Sleeping Corpses Lie on Sevared Records, a Spanish-Floridian collaboration emphasizing morbid, corpse-themed aggression.[1] In 2013, he fronted The Skeletal's mini-album Remains via Me Saco un Ojo Records, a multinational effort with members from Hooded Menace and Coffins, delivering putrid, doom-tinged death metal.[27] Lee co-founded Akatharta in 2015 as a funeral doom venture, though their debut Spiritus Immundus followed in 2017 on Transcending Obscurity Records, exploring abyssal atmospheres.[28] He also contributed to Nattravnen's 2016 formation, a blackened death metal duo with Jonny Pettersson (Belenos), culminating in the 2019 album Kult of the Raven on Transcending Obscurity.[29] Finally, Grave Wax, active since 2009 with Lee on vocals, issued the 2017 compilation Dead and Buried (2009-2016) via Morbid Visions Music, compiling early splits and demos rooted in pestilent, old-school death.[30] Beyond band work, Lee made notable guest appearances, including death growls on the track "The Caged Prisoner" from Sigh's avant-garde album In Somniphobia (2012) via Candleman Records, adding a raw edge to the Japanese band's experimental black metal.[31] He also ventured into acting, portraying the serial killer Brad in the 2011 independent horror film Deep Seeded, directed by Jaime Meyers and Brian Troxell, where his role involved demonic possession themes tied to personal hauntings.[24]Solo work and side endeavors
In 2016, Kam Lee released his debut solo EP, Reclamation of the Fallen, a limited-edition 7-inch vinyl issued by Iron Pegasus Records. The EP consists of two original death metal tracks—"Lamashtu" (featuring Jolene Tempest of Bulletbelt) and "Reclamation of the Fallen"—fully composed by Lee in terms of music and lyrics, alongside a cover of the Ramones' "Pet Sematary" introduced by a recitation of H.P. Lovecraft's poem "The Cats," reflecting his interest in horror literature.[32][33] Lee followed this with additional solo demos and singles that year, showcasing his independent production style through DIY recording. The Massacred demo reinterpreted four early Massacre tracks with updated vocals and arrangements, available initially on cassette via small labels. Similarly, the 7 Deadly Sins demo and the single "Poison" highlighted his raw, unpolished approach to death metal songwriting, distributed digitally and in limited physical formats. These releases emphasized Lee's role as a multi-instrumentalist, handling vocals, bass, and basic production himself.[1][23] Beyond traditional death metal, Lee explored experimental outlets with limited releases. His solo grindcore project Alienanalprobe, centered on satirical takes of UFO and alien abduction themes, debuted with the Classified demo/promo—a two-track effort featuring Lee's vocals, guitars, bass, and drum programming, self-recorded and released digitally. In parallel, Lee announced Gigantesque as a death/thrash endeavor in 2016, but it produced only preliminary material without a full album by 2018, remaining a side experiment in heavier, faster riffing.[34][23] Lee's non-musical activities included curating contributions for metal compilations and developing merchandise lines tied to his solo aesthetic. He assembled the Of Dread & Death limited-edition CD, a self-compiled collection of his early solo demos and promotional tracks, distributed through independent outlets to showcase unreleased material. Additionally, Lee designed and sold merchandise such as T-shirts and patches featuring custom artwork inspired by his lyrical themes, available via artist platforms to support his independent releases.[35]Recent activities (2018–present)
In 2024, Massacre, featuring Kam Lee on vocals, released their fifth studio album, Necrolution, on November 8 through Agonia Records.[36] The album, which draws on Lovecraftian themes and early death metal aesthetics, includes tracks such as "Fear of the Unknown" and "Rituals of the Abyss," with the band describing it as a nostalgic return to their late-1980s sound.[37] Prior to the full release, the group unveiled the lead single "The Colour Out of Space" on September 5, accompanied by a lyric video that highlighted Lee's signature guttural delivery.[38] Lee remained active in promoting Massacre's work through interviews throughout 2024 and 2025. In an October 2024 discussion with No Clean Singing, he reflected on the band's creative process for Necrolution and their enduring role in death metal's evolution.[3] This was followed by a May 2025 interview with Extreminal Metal Magazine, where Lee discussed Massacre's international touring plans and his contributions to the genre's foundational years.[5] Later that August, in a Blabbermouth.net feature, Lee detailed the origins of his pioneering death metal growl, revealing it stemmed from mimicking aggressive dog sounds during his early experiments in the 1980s.[39] Massacre continued their live performances with festival appearances, including a set at the Hellsinki Metal Festival in Helsinki, Finland, on August 9, 2024.[40] The band maintained an active touring schedule into 2025, announcing dates across Asia, Australia, and Europe, such as shows in Bangkok and Beijing in May.[41] However, in early November 2025, Massacre withdrew from the Morbidfest Tour due to serious health issues affecting Lee, marking a temporary pause in their commitments.[42] No further side projects or personal announcements from Lee have been publicly detailed as of late 2025.Musical style and influences
Vocal technique development
Kam Lee's development of the death growl began in the early 1980s, specifically around 1983–1984, during his time with the pre-Death band Mantas, where he sought to create a vocal style that was primal and distinct from the prevailing high-pitched screams in extreme metal.[39] As a teenager aged 15 or 16, Lee drew inspiration from observing large dogs such as rottweilers and pitbulls during feeding time, mimicking their guttural, hair-raising growls to achieve a raw, natural intensity that evoked primitive aggression.[39] This approach was revealed in a 2025 interview, where he described aiming for sounds that felt "primal, raw, and natural," contrasting with the screechy, soprano-like vocals of contemporaries like Jeff Becerra of Possessed.[5] In the Mantas demos, Lee's vocals initially incorporated higher-pitched screams influenced by thrash and speed metal bands such as Slayer and Possessed, reflecting the era's emphasis on high-octave aggression and clarity.[6] However, he quickly transitioned to deeper, guttural lows by emulating animalistic snarls, marking a pivotal evolution toward the death growl that defined his contributions to the genre.[23] This shift was refined further in Massacre, where his delivery became more consistent and bestial, moving away from the banshee-like wails common in early 1980s metal toward a coherent, low-end rumble that prioritized emotional ferocity over melodic precision.[6] Technically, Lee's death growl relied on controlled throat tension and diaphragmatic breath support to produce sustained, resonant lows without straining the vocal cords, allowing for extended performances while maintaining phonetic enunciation inspired by Tom G. Warrior of Hellhammer and Celtic Frost.[23] Lee's innovations predated many peers in death metal, with his 1984 Mantas demos featuring early instances of the growl that set a benchmark for the genre's vocal aggression, influencing subsequent vocalists by establishing the guttural style as a core element years before it became widespread.[43]Lyrical themes and inspirations
Kam Lee's lyrics have long drawn heavily from H.P. Lovecraft's cosmic horror, incorporating themes of ancient, incomprehensible entities and existential dread that permeate his work across multiple bands. This influence is evident in song titles such as "From Beyond" and "Cryptic Realms," which directly evoke Lovecraftian narratives of otherworldly invasion and hidden dimensions.[3][44][45] Recurring motifs in Lee's writing include death as an inevitable force, occult rituals summoning forbidden knowledge, and apocalyptic scenarios of societal collapse, often blending visceral imagery with supernatural elements. These themes appear consistently from his early contributions to Death and Massacre through later projects, reflecting a fascination with mortality and the macabre.[5][46][47] Lee collaborated with artist Ed Repka on Lovecraftian album artwork, notably for Massacre's From Beyond, where Repka's illustrations depicted grotesque creatures inspired by Lovecraft's mythos, visually reinforcing the lyrical content.[48] Over time, Lee's lyrical approach evolved from raw, unfiltered horror in his formative years to incorporating more philosophical undertones in later works, exploring deeper questions of human insignificance amid cosmic chaos.[3][44]Legacy and impact
Contributions to death metal
Kam Lee is widely recognized as a co-pioneer of the death growl vocal technique, a guttural style that became a cornerstone of death metal's sonic identity in the 1980s. Alongside Chuck Schuldiner of Death and influenced by earlier extreme metal acts like Hellhammer, Lee developed his signature low, primal growls by mimicking the aggressive sounds of large dogs, such as rottweilers and pitbulls, during his teenage years. This approach, which emphasized raw intensity and phonetic enunciation, first appeared on early Mantas (pre-Death) demos and evolved into a distinct "death grunt" on Massacre's 1991 debut album From Beyond, setting a template for the genre's vocal aggression that distinguished it from thrash metal's higher-pitched screams.[39][23][5] Through his work with early Death (as Mantas) and Massacre, Lee played a pivotal role in shaping the Florida death metal scene, particularly the influential Tampa sound characterized by its thick, down-tuned guitars and horror-infused aesthetics. As a founding member of Mantas in 1983, he contributed to demo recordings that blended thrash metal's speed with emerging death elements, helping transition the genre from thrash roots—drawing from bands like Slayer and Possessed—into a more brutal, independent extreme metal form during the underground tape-trading era of the mid-1980s. Massacre's formation in 1984 further solidified this Tampa-centric sound, with Lee's vocals adding a visceral edge to the band's riff-heavy style, influencing the regional cluster of acts that defined Florida's death metal epicenter around studios like Morrisound Recording.[4][23][49] Lee's vocal innovations extended beyond his bands, impacting subsequent generations of death metal vocalists through direct acknowledgments and stylistic emulation. He is credited with inspiring Napalm Death's Mark "Barney" Greenway, who listed Lee as an influence on the band's 1990 album Harmony Corruption and adopted elements of the "death grunt" in grindcore-death crossovers. Similarly, UK's Benediction referenced Massacre's sound—rooted in Lee's growls—as a blueprint for their debut Subconscious Terror (1990), positioning it as the "U.K.'s answer to Massacre." While not formal mentorship, Lee's early collaborations, such as with ex-Obituary guitarist Allen West in later projects, and his foundational role in the Tampa scene indirectly shaped vocalists in bands like Obituary and Morbid Angel by establishing the growl as an essential tool for conveying thematic brutality.[50][51]Recognition and tributes
Kam Lee is widely acknowledged as a foundational figure in the development of death metal vocals, particularly for pioneering the guttural "death growl" technique during his early work with Mantas and Death in the mid-1980s.[39] His contributions are highlighted in contexts such as the Metal Hall of Fame's tribute to 1980s death metal icons, where he is noted alongside other early innovators for shaping the genre's raw intensity.[52] This recognition underscores his role in establishing the sonic blueprint for extreme metal, with peers and historians crediting his primal, dog-inspired growls as a departure from prior influences like black metal's higher-pitched screams.[47] Tributes to Lee's impact appear in documentaries exploring the Florida death metal scene, such as the 2016 film Death by Metal, which chronicles the origins of Death and the broader Tampa Bay underground movement he helped ignite through early demos and live performances.[13] While Lee himself was not interviewed for the project, it pays homage to the formative years he shared with Chuck Schuldiner and Rick Rozz, emphasizing how their collaborative efforts in bands like Mantas laid the groundwork for the genre's explosive growth in the Sunshine State.[53] In recent years, Lee has received prominent media features that affirm his status as the "growl forefather" of death metal. A 2024 interview with No Clean Singing described him as one of the most prolific American death metal vocalists, praising his "primordial growl" and long-standing influence since 1983.[3] Similarly, a 2025 Blabbermouth.net article detailed his vocal evolution, positioning his early Death demos as the "birthplace of death metal growling" and highlighting his ongoing relevance with Massacre's latest releases.[39] These pieces, along with coverage in outlets like Arrow Lords of Metal, reinforce his pioneering legacy amid the resurgence of old-school death metal.[54] Fan and peer acknowledgments of Lee's work extend to homages by contemporary bands, including covers of Massacre's seminal tracks like those from From Beyond, which continue to inspire tributes in the underground scene.[55] MetalBite's 2024 feature on Massacre dubbed him the "Godfather of Growl," reflecting widespread admiration from musicians who cite his technique as a cornerstone for modern extreme vocals.[56] This enduring respect is evident in festival appearances and collaborative nods, where Lee's innovations are celebrated as timeless touchstones for the genre.[57]Discography
With Death
Kam Lee's involvement with Death was limited to the band's formative demo phase from 1984 to 1985, where he contributed vocals and drums across all recordings, helping shape the group's raw, aggressive proto-death metal sound. During this period, Death—featuring Chuck Schuldiner on guitar and vocals, Rick Rozz on guitar or bass, and Kam Lee on drums and co-vocals—released three primary studio demos that captured their evolving style, drawing from thrash influences while pioneering guttural vocals and blast beats. No full-length studio albums were recorded with Lee, as he departed the band in mid-1985 to pursue other projects. The first demo, Death by Metal, was recorded in May 1984 at a local studio in Florida. Self-produced on a limited cassette run, it featured five tracks emphasizing fast tempos, horror-themed lyrics, and Lee's dual role on drums and shared vocals with Schuldiner. The tracklist is as follows:| Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Legion of Doom | 3:24 |
| 2 | Evil Dead | 3:11 |
| 3 | Beyond the Unholy Grave | 3:14 |
| 4 | Power of Darkness | 2:40 |
| 5 | Death by Metal | 2:17 |
| Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Corpse Grinder | 3:04 |
| 2 | Summoned to Die | 2:37 |
| 3 | Witch of Hell | 2:56 |
| 4 | Reign of Terror | 2:25 |
| 5 | Slaughterhouse | 2:37 |
| Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Infernal Death | 2:46 |
| 2 | Baptized in Blood | 4:23 |
| 3 | Archangel | 3:00 |
With Massacre
Kam Lee's tenure with Massacre began in 1985, following his early work with Death, and marked a pivotal phase in the band's development as a cornerstone of the Florida death metal scene. His distinctive guttural vocals, often credited with pioneering the "death growl," became a signature element of the band's sound during their initial run from 1985 to 1992. The band released demos in 1986 before achieving their breakthrough with a full-length album in 1991. After a hiatus, Massacre issued a compilation of early material in 2006, preserving Lee's contributions from the band's formative years. Lee rejoined the band in 2019 amid lineup changes and internal disputes, leading to a revitalized era with studio albums, EPs, and compilations that hark back to their old-school roots while incorporating modern production.[63][4]Studio Albums
Massacre's studio output with Lee spans the band's classic debut, a second album in the 1990s, and their recent revival, emphasizing brutal riffs, Lovecraftian themes, and unrelenting aggression. The 1991 debut From Beyond was recorded at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, Florida, and produced by Scott Burns, capturing the raw energy of the era's death metal explosion. Released on Earache Records, it featured the lineup of Lee on vocals, Rick Rozz on guitar, Terry Butler on bass, and Bill Andrews on drums. The album's track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dawn of Eternity | 5:13 |
| 2 | Cryptic Realms | 4:51 |
| 3 | Biohazard | 4:36 |
| 4 | Chamber of Ages | 4:51 |
| 5 | From Beyond | 4:27 |
| 6 | Defeat Remains | 4:15 |
| 7 | Succubus | 3:24 |
| 8 | Symbolic Immortality | 3:31 |
| 9 | Corpse Grinder | 3:18 |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Clangor of War | 5:04 |
| 2 | Maimed for Life | 5:05 |
| 3 | Hate Generator | 3:56 |
| 4 | Provoking Death | 5:02 |
| 5 | Biohazard | 4:40 |
| 6 | Death's Design | 5:31 |
| 7 | Cryptic Realms | 4:53 |
| 8 | Bloodletting | 5:11 |
| 9 | Defeat in Defiance | 4:27 |
| 10 | Warrior of Hate | 5:03 |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Resurgence | 4:27 |
| 2 | The Eternal Torment | 3:53 |
| 3 | No Redemption | 4:07 |
| 4 | Death Toll | 3:35 |
| 5 | Summon the Deathbrokers | 4:14 |
| 6 | Madness | 3:40 |
| 7 | The Final Day | 4:00 |
| 8 | Boundless | 3:58 |
| 9 | Embraced by the Void | 4:22 |
| 10 | Call of the Void | 3:57 |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fear of the Unknown | 4:02 |
| 2 | Necrolution | 3:48 |
| 3 | Call from the Grave | 3:55 |
| 4 | The Colour Out of Space | 4:10 |
| 5 | Ripping the Flesh | 3:42 |
| 6 | Scream from the Void | 4:05 |
| 7 | Into the Coven | 3:58 |
| 8 | Storm of the Undead | 4:12 |
| 9 | Damned to Eternity | 3:50 |
EPs and Demos
Massacre's early releases with Lee were demos that laid the foundation for their sound, followed by a post-breakup EP. The Chamber of Ages demo (1986, self-released) was the band's first official recording, featuring Lee alongside Borders on bass, Rozz on guitar, and Andrews on drums. Recorded at a local studio in Tampa, it included raw versions of tracks later refined for From Beyond. The track listing comprises:- Dawn of Eternity (4:55)
- Cryptic Realms (4:20)
- Chamber of Ages (4:30)
- Inhuman Condition (3:52)
- Warhead (3:25)
- Cryptic Realms (4:10)
- Senseless Abortion (3:40)