The Soloist Essays

  • The Soloist Reflection

    1358 Words  | 6 Pages

    Many things occur among people every day. Based on a true story, the soloist is a great story about a man and friend who had a psychological disorder that changes both of lives. As a result they became the best of friends and still to present day. According to the words of Steve Lopez he says, "There are people who tell me I 've helped him. Mental health experts, who say that the simple act of being someone 's friend can change his brain chemistry, improve his functioning in the world. I can 't speak

  • The Soloist Character Analysis

    884 Words  | 4 Pages

    “A true friend accepts who you are and helps you become who you should be.” Steve and Nathaniel proved that friendship and happiness can be real in the novel The Soloist by Steve Lopez. The way friendship is portrayed in the novel is unexpected in such a way that we don’t see it happen often in our daily life. It is important to our society because finding a true friend is really difficult to find. True friendship is hard to find now in days because we expect many things in return from other people

  • What Is The Thesis Of The Soloist By Steve Lopez

    1553 Words  | 7 Pages

    What would you do if you spotted a homeless man in the streets playing music in an extraordinary fashion? The Soloist by Steve Lopez focuses on the lives of Nathaniel Anthony Ayers and Steve Lopez. Steve Lopez is an LA Times reporter who saw Nathaniel playing in the streets. Nathaniel on the other hand, is a homeless and schizophrenic musician. To Steve, this was just another story , but little did he know that this story would turn into a friendship. Nathaniel was very startled and doubtful of

  • Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 Analysis

    1013 Words  | 5 Pages

    Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F major, BWV 1047 The instruments heard throughout the concerto are violins, violas, a cello, a bass, an oboe, a recorder, a keyed trumpet, and a harpsichord. The first movement begins at a quick tempo. Sixteenth notes are played constantly and are passed around the different instruments. Throughout the sixteenth not passages or mordents and other embellishments. The keyed trumpet plays lip trills rather than p laying fingered trills. The phrases of the first

  • The Soloist Analysis

    735 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Soloist Mental health is becoming a major section of health care. The movie “The soloist” exquisitely demonstrates how mental health is very important to make a living, take care of yourself and interact with the community. The Soloist film follows a journalist, Steve, who is on the hunt for a good story for his column in the LA Times.  He hears a homeless musician, Nathaniel, playing one day while on lunch who mentioned that he attended The Juilliard School.  From there on Steve tries to form

  • The Soloist Schizophrenia

    415 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Soloist, with its root in a real life story, offers a remarkable opportunity to observe a number of very essential disputes in the long-term management of schizophrenia. The film gives us a good example of how the effect of the illness can have on the words, thoughts, perceptions and behavior of sufferers and highlights the fluctuations that occur naturally in the disorder. It also elevates the topic of treatment and the individual’s right to choose whether or not he or she wants to take medication

  • The Soloist Film Analysis

    272 Words  | 2 Pages

    Although the main intention of the film “The Soloist” was to tell the tragic story of a musically talented and smart man named Nathaniel Ayers, the film also succeeded in bringing forth the controversy that is the amount of people with mental illnesses that go untreated and/ or end up living on the streets. Nathaniel was an undoubtedly talented young man when it came to playing the cello, as he was accepted into Julliard, a prestigious institution for the study and exploration of musical abilities

  • The Soloist: Schizophrenia

    1365 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Soloist What is schizophrenia? Schizophrenia is a serious disorder that affects how a person thinks, feels and acts. Someone that has schizophrenia may have difficulty distinguishing between reality and imaginary. They may have difficulty expressing normal emotions in social situations and may be unresponsive or withdrawn. Schizophrenia is not split personality or multiple personality. The majority of people that have schizophrenia is not violent nor pose a danger to others. Schizophrenia is

  • Personal Narrative: Soloist

    876 Words  | 4 Pages

    defeated. Six years of my head in the clouds, and finally I surrendered to practicality: I just wasn’t soloist material. So what if I had wanted nothing else for as long as I could remember; who cares if I had given up everything to pursue a crazy dream? People make new decisions all the time, right? I’m a curious person - I’m just reevaluating the world, I told myself. I looked at the clock - 10pm. Soloist or not, I still had to be ready for my violin lesson the next day. I grabbed my water bottle and

  • The Soloist Book Report

    844 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Soloist: A Lost Dream, an Unlikely Friendship, and the Redemptive Power of Music (2009), a nonfiction book by American author and journalist Steve Lopez, is based on a series of Los Angeles Times columns in which journalist Lopez chronicled his friendship with schizophrenic bass player Nathaniel Anthony Ayers, a talented musician who was living on the streets when they met. Lopez’s attempt to help Ayers and get him the attention he deserved for his talent was a long and tumultuous process. Exploring

  • The Soloist Book Analysis

    582 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the words of Steve Lopez, “You're only as good or bad as your latest attempt to make some connection with the world.” The novel, The Soloist, by Steve Lopez is an insight to Lopez’s time helping and connecting with Nathaniel Ayers, a homeless schizophrenic. When Lopez meets Nathaniel he is awed by his musical talent and soon discovers he once attended Julliard, a prestigious school of performing arts. Lopez’s story was transformed into a film produced in 2008. Lopez’s character in the book and

  • The Soloist Movie Analysis

    688 Words  | 3 Pages

    future for them and their community. Ayers eventually got off of the street, into an apartment and a find for treatment for him mentally ill disorder (Santis, 2011). Homeless people lives unrivaled at a blink of an eye. Just like the movie “The Soloist”, one minute you are looking at a promising future and then the next minute you become homeless (Santis, 2011). You are living under bridges and on the sidewalks trying to get the attention of the people that are passing by.

  • Schizophrenia In Steve Lopez's The Soloist

    346 Words  | 2 Pages

    family member, a close friend, anyone, now imagine that person writhing with anger to an extreme extent within the confines of their own mind. Behavior such as that of schizophrenia is what columnist Steve Lopez tries to describe in his novel, The Soloist. And the character of the mentally ill Nathaniel Ayers, for instance, is not only the main reflection for Lopez’s interaction with a schizophrenic mind, but is only a part of what the novel has to deliver to the reader. In a brief summary, the entire

  • Verbal Therapeutic Communication In The Movie 'The Soloist'

    2628 Words  | 11 Pages

    Movie Paper: The Soloist Allison Vander Kooi College of Owosso, Baker College NUR3450: Mental Health Nursing for the BSN Dr. Heather Thornton April 15, 2023 Movie Paper: The Soloist The movie, The Soloist, is based on a true story of a homeless musical prodigy that once went to Julliard and has schizophrenia named Nathaniel Ayers. In the movie Nathaniel is played by Jamie Foxx. Nathaniel is discovered by an LA Times columnist named Steve Lopez, who is played by Robert Downey. Steve

  • What Are The Similarities Between The Soloist And Radio

    959 Words  | 4 Pages

    Both The Soloist and Radio were movies that had great contrast between each other while also having a lot of similarities. Both movies have similarities in their characters, messages, and music but not a lot. Conversely, the movies differ in their characters because all of the characters in the films have different purposes, and personalities. In their messages, since their plot and characters are different both movies would have different meaning messages. The music is much more different in both

  • Synopsis Of The Book 'The Soloist' By Steve Lopez

    711 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Soloist by Steve Lopez is the true story of Mr. Steve Lopez, a columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and his journey to move a stranger-turned-friend off the streets and into a place where he can get the help he needs and be able to flourish as the talented musician he is. The star of the book, Nathaniel Anthony Ayers, is a 54 year old homeless musician with a mental illness. Nathaniel (or Mr. Ayers later in the book) uses music as something to ground him, to calm him down and bring him back to

  • The Soloist By Nathaniel Anthony Ayers, Jr.

    920 Words  | 4 Pages

    function in society. Imagine giving up everything in order to keep from hurting loved ones. Imagine pushing belongings around in a shopping cart because trying to treat an incurable disease is worse than living alone on the streets. In Steve Lopez’s The Soloist, an unlikely friendship sparks between a homeless schizophrenic and a journalist for the LA Times. The former Juilliard student, and the subject of Lopez’s articles, Nathaniel Anthony Ayers, Jr., uses music as his escape from the mental anguish and

  • Analysis Of Nathaniel Ayers Symptoms Of Schizophrenia

    592 Words  | 3 Pages

    When Nathaniel Ayers was first introduced in The Soloist (2009), one of his symptoms of Schizophrenia was evident: loose association. Loose association is “rapidly shifting from one subject to another, believing that the incoherent statements makes sense” (Comer, 2014, p. 366). Ayers’s subjects in his first conversation with Steve Lopez jumped from treating a violin like a child, to “armies” in Ohio and Los Angeles, to the cello, to Beethoven running Los Angeles, and so on. Another one of Ayers’s

  • Concert Review Essay

    480 Words  | 2 Pages

    synchronized. As far as the soloist there were two female and three male. I thought that both females had more complex and skilled arias compared to the males. Even during trios and singing with the choir, the female soloists out shined the men. With that being said, the female soloist sounded ten times better and talented then all three male soloist. At times especially towards the end of the oratorio I thought the orchestra was so loud that I could not hear over the choir or soloist. My favorite part of

  • Improvisational Music Analysis

    936 Words  | 4 Pages

    thinking about the notes coming out of one’s instrument, forces the improviser to create different ideas every time. Since one’s stream of conscious and unconscious thought is never the same at any two points in time, there will never be a time where a soloist will play the same solo