SUMMER BLOWOUT SALE 2026
Over 1,000 titles from top classical labels are on sale now at ArkivMusic!
Celebrate summer with a collection of music filled with color, charm, and discovery. From the shimmering worlds of Debussy and Ravel to the folk-inspired melodies of Dvořák and Grieg, the vibrant landscapes of Respighi and Copland, and the timeless brilliance of Mendelssohn, Saint-Saëns, and Vivaldi, this sale brings together recordings perfect for the season. Browse titles spanning beloved classics, orchestral favorites, chamber music, and contemporary discoveries, and find something new to enjoy all summer long.
Shop now before the sale ends at 9:00am ET, Tuesday, July 28th, 2026.
1004 products
Songs by Cole Porter & Rodgers & Hart: The 1953 Walden Sessi
Telemann, G.P.: Chamber Music
Opera Arias (Baritone): Luca, Giuseppe de - CILEA, F. / MASS
PIANO CONCERTOS NOS 14, 15 & 1
Britten / Saunders / Jackman: Music For Solo Oboe
Liszt: Symphonic Poems / Michael Halász, New Zealand So
BBC Music (3/98, p.72) - Performance: 3 (out of 5), Sound: 3 (out of 5) - "Liszt's symphonic poems call for performances that blend flamboyance and exalted lyricism - or, in other words, that revel in Romantic empathy....Fortunately, Michael Halász and the New Zealand Symphony offer real performances rather than unimaginative run-throughs....The orchestra...plays with considerable fire in extrovert passages..."
Best Of Schubert
The Best Of Mendelssohn
The Best Of Tchaikovsky
The Best Of Liszt
The Best Of Weber
Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker, Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty Excerpts
Handel: The Messiah - Highlights / Scholars Baroque Ensemble
Debussy: Piano Works, Vol. 1 / Thiollier
Smetana: Má Vlast / Järvi, Detroit Symphony Orchestra
Recorded in: Orchestra Hall, Detroit 28-29 January 1993, 26-27 March 1994 & 23 May 1994 Producer(s) Brian Couzens Charles Greenwell Leslie B. Dunner Sound Engineer(s) Dan Dene Robert Shafer
Tchaikovsky: Seasons (The) / Borodin: Petite Suite
Vivaldi: Vocal and Instrumental Works / Chicago Baroque Ensemble
Smetana: Má Vlast / Antoni Wit, Polish Nrso
Fauré: Requiem, Etc / Summerly, Beckley, Gedge, Et Al
TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 3 / The Tempest
Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker - Highlights / Ondrej Lenárd
Britten: Young Person's Guide; Saint-Saëns: Carnival of the Animals; Prokofiev: Peter & The Wolf
The French composer Camille Saint-Saëns was prolific and lived a long time, although by the time of his death in 1921 music had changed beyond anything he could have conceived. He was a gifted pianist and, in common with many other well known French composers, found employment and distinction as organist at one of the principal churches in Paris. The popular Carnival of the Animals, described as A Zoological Fantasy, was written in 1886, originally for two pianos and a small chamber orchestra, to celebrate that year's carnival. The composer forbade further performances of this occasional music, except for The Swan, which enjoyed immediate and irresistible popularity.
The Soviet composer Sergey Prokofiev wrote his Peter and the Wolf in 1936 to introduce to children the instruments of the orchestra. He had taken his two sons to see performances at the Moscow Children's Music Theatre and this had suggested to him the possibility of a composition of this kind. The boy Peter, represented by the strings, is playing in the meadow, forbidden territory. A bird, shown by the flute, sings in a tree: a duck, the oboe, swims in the pond, and a cat, the clarinet, comes onto the scene, sending the bird up to a higher branch. Peter's grandfather, the bassoon, warns the boy not to venture out, but meanwhile a wolf, the French horns, comes into the meadow,
and adventures ensue with spoken narration.
Ten years later, in 1946, the English composer Benjamin Britten was asked to write music for an educational film introducing the instruments of the orchestra. For the purpose he chose a theme by the great 17th century English composer Henry Purcell and wrote a set of variations, each of which shows the characteristics of a particular instrument or group of instruments. The alternative title of the work, Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell, is an exact description. The other title, The Young Person's Guide to the
Orchestra, makes fun of the titles much favored by writers of moral tales in the 19th century, providing "young persons" with advice on how to regulate every aspect of their lives. At the most exciting part of the concluding fugue, the brass instruments play again the original theme, leading to a grand conclusion.
Tchaikovsky & Dvorak: Serenades / Berglund
