Tag: stella donnelly

  • Gig Review – Stella Donnelly with Ullah and Anna Schneider

    Gig Review – Stella Donnelly with Ullah and Anna Schneider

    The Rechabite, Friday, March 6, 2026

    The Rechabite was heaving with good vibes all round as Stella Donnelly returned to her hometown for the last show touring her latest and greatest album Love and Fortune. Stella captivated the packed room with many singalong moments throughout her now well-stocked catalogue of songs.

    Opening the night was Anna Schneider and her band playing some beautiful ambient, dreamy pop. The four-piece warmed up the crowd nicely with a soundscape centred around Anna’s acoustic guitar and vocals, backed by a tight rhythm section and excellent synth work. The crowd were onboard and won over by the time the set finished.

    Time for Ullah and the packed room to really get going. With an ever-growing list of quality tunes coming from the Perth songwriter and band, you could really get a sense that big things are coming. Mixing the very catchy, radio friendly pop songs like What Nightmares Are Made Of (the softer acoustic breakdown in the middle of the song is a gorgeous masterclass in songwriting, and another level live) and I Want It All (with a brilliant, crowd-ready singalong chorus, and the crowd obliged) with the more introspective songs like latest single Shoulder To Shoulder. The performance showed confidence and a bit of cheek, and the crown-wearing singer showed she can handle the big stage.

    With the room buzzing and everyone feeling the love, Stella Donnelly arrived on stage and didn’t stop smiling. From the early cuts like Standing Ovation, Stella set a standard that kept up through the night. Synthy sounds to set the mood, then kicking into the guitar driven indie pop she is so good at. The maturity on the album came through in the live show, with Donnelly beaming and looking like she and the band were really enjoying being up there. This was absolutely reciprocated by the crowd, with plenty of singalong moments coming from songs new and old.

    Other set highlights included the wonderful album title-track Love and Fortune, Mosquito and Baths. Stella kept it interesting by moving between the full band, just her and guitar, and a tight keyboard group; a great way to keep the crowd interested and guessing how she will present the songs. Boys Will Be Boys was particularly stark and emotional, one of the moments where the room took on a more sombre tone. Good art is about taking any subject matter, be it difficult or easy, and turning it into something people can absorb, think about, enjoy, hate, whatever emotions come out. The other side is being able to present it amongst a variety of other topics and moving from serious to lighter themes without losing the room. In Donnelly’s case, she has mastered the art perfectly, and the whole set blended because of this.

    A great evening of music all up, and it is wonderful to see these extremely talented songwriters continuing to release high quality music and back it up with engrossing live performances.

  • Album Review – Stella Donnelly: Love and Fortune

    Album Review – Stella Donnelly: Love and Fortune

    Stella

    Rating: 4 out of 5.

    Stella Donnelly is back with more polish and songwriting maturity on Love and Fortune. From the outset the album sets a standard and doesn’t flinch, nor does Donnelly with her candid, confessional storytelling.

    Backed by an excellent band, the album is tight, well produced and navigates the full range of Stella’s arsenal – from catchy guitar pop to electronic synth driven exploration, often in the same song.

    Opening track Standing Ovation shows this in full force. Honest lyrics about teen love over a ‘verby synth hook, starting out slow dance before suddenly kicking into the jangly pop Stella is known for.

    The album continues the balance of guitar driven, synthy introspect throughout. Being Nice, clocking in at 1:41, is short, sweet, poppy, and full of lyrical sharpness. Feel It Change pangs with relationship problems (“I love you baby, but I’m scared to be near ya”) backed by catchy guitar licks.

    Folky a cappella follows with Baths, another short one at 1:48. Memories of family life, with the smallest hint of synth swirling in the background.

    In Please Everyone she sings “I offered up my shoulder you could lean upon, but you climb right on”, then takes a turn reversing who’s leaning on who; it’s quality, soul open songwriting.

    The best part of the album comes in the gentle but still catchy combination of Ghosts and Love and Fortune. Ghosts is a gorgeous drifting tune with Stella’s vocals backed by an infectious piano lick.

    I can imagine a crowd singing along to the title track. It creeps up on you and once she starts singing “Love and fortune, wait in the hallway to greet you” you are hooked. It’s a soft track so we’re not talking anthem singalong, more like everyone swaying along and singing with all their hearts.

    The album closer, Laying Low, is a highlight of Donnelly’s juxtaposition of sweetness and slightly unstable melodies. A synth riff driving the verses creates that tension, but Donnelly’s vocals ground the song and lead into her classic style of chorus.

    Love and Fortune is an excellent record and a sign of an evolving artist, letting it all out as she has always done, while also allowing us all in to share the catharsis in great, catchy indie pop music.