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The Genre Memphis Reveals New Look

Customers will get their first look at the changes September 20th.

You could say The Genre Memphis’ genre is “Classy.” With a capital “C.”

Lernard Chambers, 31, who owns the restaurant with his twin brother Bernard Chambers, recently redesigned the restaurant at 200 Poplar Avenue, Suite 105, and gave it a “whole new look.” Customers will get to see the changes September 20th.

A new 15-seater bar greets customers when they enter. “It’s pretty much an L-shaped bar,” Lernard says.

The top of the 40-foot long bar is black epoxy with hints of blue and gray. Green plastic boxwood covers the front and the sides. Booths and tables have been refigured and artwork graces the walls.

Lernard worked with Ella Mag Design Studio to come up with the modern look he wanted. Erica Kelsey, the studio’s owner, also “freestyled and did her own thing.”

He wants his customers “to feel like they’re not here in Memphis. She already had that concept, so she took it and ran with it.”

Lernard, who opened The Genre Memphis three years ago, leased an adjacent space he calls “The Garage” about three months ago. “The Garage is pretty much like an event space, but it’s also like a bar and a multi-purpose event space, like an overflow room.”

When people ask him where The Genre Memphis and The Garage are located, Lernard says, “Everything is across from the jail.” That’s the Walter L. Bailey Jr. Criminal Justice Center, which houses the Shelby County Jail, aka “201 Poplar.”

To get to The Garage, Lernard says, “You pretty much go out the back door [of The Genre Memphis] and The Garage is to the left, adjacent to the restaurant.”

He and his brother were aware of the space, which was just a vacant building, when they began leasing The Genre Memphis. But, Lernard says, “We didn’t want to grow too big too fast.”

“The Garage” doesn’t mean the building had been a garage, Lernard says. “The whole meaning behind ‘The Garage’ is, ‘Dreams begin in the garage.’ Meaning, pretty much, Amazon started in the garage.”

And Nike, he adds.

Lernard’s original idea for The Genre Memphis hasn’t changed. “The front is a musical passport. You sit down in The Genre and it takes you out of the house. You’re not in Memphis. It’s something totally different.”

Album covers and records hang on the wall. The main wall, which bears a neon “G,” features vinyl record covers that have been laminated and nailed to two-by-fours close to the hole in the record so they can still be played.

An “out-of-town vibe” is what he’s going for, Lernard says. “Your drink gets you in your zone. And you have some good food. We have a DJ that pretty much plays some of everything from blues to Michael Jackson to current hip-hop to Top 40. He controls where you go.”

Lernard and his brother are both DJs. They call themselves “DJ LNB” meaning “Lernard” and “Bernard.” Lernard also was a DJ on KXHT Hot 107.1.

DJing is where the name “The Genre” came from. “There are different types of DJs,” Lernard says. “There are wedding and club DJs. There are DJs who specialize in Delta blues or other types of music. We were always considered able to play all types of music. So, it was called ‘genre DJs.’”

Lernard also features a genre-type food menu. “When we first opened it was catfish, wings, and sliders.”

They now have 30 items on the menu, including their most popular items: catfish and lamb. “My mom’s side is from Albany, Georgia,” Lernard says. “We used to go down there and insist they do catfish for us. I started cooking my granddad’s recipe and brought it down here and made it to what it is. It’s pretty much their style, but we also add this special sauce, which is ‘201 Sauce.’ It’s kind of a sweet heat sauce.”

In addition to catering, he and his brother also own a food truck, where they offer their complete menu.

Lernard, who comes up with the menu items, says he makes something once, tries it, and if he likes it, he trains the kitchen staff how to make it.

But Lernard is usually in the front of the house. He refers to his customers as his “celebrities,” Lernard says. “Because we all are special in our own way.

“You contribute to us. You patronize us. Keep us going. You are our celebrities.”

By Michael Donahue

Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until early 2017, when he joined Contemporary Media.