Tarragona, Valencia, Livorno, Civitavecchia, Genoa, Marseille, Tarragona
MSCOR20260529TARTARHOL

Tarragona, Valencia, Livorno, Civitavecchia, Genoa, Marseille, Tarragona

Departure 29 May 2026
Duration 7 Nights
Cruise Line MSC Cruises
Ship MSC Orchestra

Featured Cabins

0800 059 0570

Itinerary

Tarragona, Spain

Date of arrival 29 May 2026
Tarragona

Valencia, Spain

Date of arrival 30 May 2026

Valencia, Spain’s third-largest municipality, is a proud city with a thriving nightlife and restaurant scene, quality museums, and spectacular contemporary architecture, juxtaposed with a thoroughly charming historic quarter, making it a popular destination year in year out. During the Civil War, it was the last seat of the Republican Loyalist government (1935–36), holding out against Franco’s National forces until the country fell to 40 years of dictatorship. Today it represents the essence of contemporary Spain—daring design and architecture along with experimental cuisine—but remains deeply conservative and proud of its traditions. Though it faces the Mediterranean, Valencia’s history and geography have been defined most significantly by the River Turia and the fertile huerta that surrounds it.The city has been fiercely contested ever since it was founded by the Greeks. El Cid captured Valencia from the Moors in 1094 and won his strangest victory here in 1099: he died in the battle, but his corpse was strapped into his saddle and so frightened the besieging Moors that it caused their complete defeat. In 1102 his widow, Jimena, was forced to return the city to Moorish rule; Jaume I finally drove them out in 1238. Modern Valencia was best known for its frequent disastrous floods until the River Turia was diverted to the south in the late 1950s. Since then the city has been on a steady course of urban beautification. The lovely bridges that once spanned the Turia look equally graceful spanning a wandering municipal park, and the spectacularly futuristic Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències (City of Arts and Sciences), most of it designed by Valencia-born architect Santiago Calatrava, has at last created an exciting architectural link between this river town and the Mediterranean. If you’re in Valencia, an excursion to Albufera Nature Park is a worthwhile day trip.

Valencia

Livorno, Italy

Date of arrival 1 Jun 2026

Livorno is a gritty city with a long and interesting history. In the early Middle Ages it alternately belonged to Pisa and Genoa. In 1421 Florence, seeking access to the sea, bought it. Cosimo I (1519–74) started construction of the harbor in 1571, putting Livorno on the map. After Ferdinando I de’ Medici (1549–1609) proclaimed Livorno a free city, it became a haven for people suffering from religious persecution; Roman Catholics from England and Jews and Moors from Spain and Portugal, among others, settled here. The Quattro Mori (Four Moors), also known as the Monument to Ferdinando I, commemorates this. (The statue of Ferdinando I dates from 1595, the bronze Moors by Pietro Tacca from the 1620s.)In the following centuries, and particularly in the 18th, Livorno boomed as a port. In the 19th century the town drew a host of famous Britons passing through on their grand tours. Its prominence continued up to World War II, when it was heavily bombed. Much of the town’s architecture, therefore, postdates the war, and it’s somewhat difficult to imagine what it might have looked like before. Livorno has recovered from the war, however, as it’s become a huge point of departure for container ships, as well as the only spot in Tuscany for cruise ships to dock for the day.Most of Livorno’s artistic treasures date from the 17th century and aren’t all that interesting unless you dote on obscure baroque artists. Livorno’s most famous native artist, Amedeo Modigliani (1884–1920), was of much more recent vintage. Sadly, there’s no notable work by him in his hometown.There may not be much in the way of art, but it’s still worth strolling around the city. The Mercato Nuovo, which has been around since 1894, sells all sorts of fruits, vegetables, grains, meat, and fish. Outdoor markets nearby are also chock-full of local color. The presence of Camp Darby, an American military base just outside town, accounts for the availability of many American products.If you have time, Livorno is worth a stop for lunch or dinner at the very least.

Livorno

Civitavecchia, Italy

Date of arrival 2 Jun 2026

Italy’s vibrant capital lives in the present, but no other city on earth evokes its past so powerfully. For over 2,500 years, emperors, popes, artists, and common citizens have left their mark here. Archaeological remains from ancient Rome, art-stuffed churches, and the treasures of Vatican City vie for your attention, but Rome is also a wonderful place to practice the Italian-perfected il dolce far niente, the sweet art of idleness. Your most memorable experiences may include sitting at a caffè in the Campo de’ Fiori or strolling in a beguiling piazza.

Civitavecchia

Genoa, Italy

Date of arrival 3 Jun 2026

Genoa is a port city in the Northwest of Italy. Home to the Genoa Aquarium, famous for having the largest exposition of biodiversity in Europe, the city is also a great place to visit for anyone interested in architecture.

Genoa

Marseille, France

Date of arrival 4 Jun 2026

Since being designated a European Capital of Culture for 2013, with an estimated €660 million of funding in the bargain, Marseille has been in the throes of an extraordinary transformation, with no fewer than five major new arts centers, a beautifully refurbished port, revitalized neighborhoods, and a slew of new shops and restaurants. Once the underdog, this time-burnished city is now welcoming an influx of weekend tourists who have colonized entire neighborhoods and transformed them into elegant pieds-à-terre (or should we say, mer). The second-largest city in France, Marseille is one of Europe’s most vibrant destinations. Feisty and fond of broad gestures, it is also as complicated and as cosmopolitan now as it was when a band of Phoenician Greeks first sailed into the harbor that is today’s Vieux Port in 600 BC. Legend has it that on that same day a local chieftain’s daughter, Gyptis, needed to choose a husband, and her wandering eyes settled on the Greeks’ handsome commander Protis. Her dowry brought land near the mouth of the Rhône, where the Greeks founded Massalia, the most important Continental shipping port in antiquity. The port flourished for some 500 years as a typical Greek city, enjoying the full flush of classical culture, its gods, its democratic political system, its sports and theater, and its naval prowess. Caesar changed all that, besieging the city in 49 BC and seizing most of its colonies. In 1214 Marseille was seized again, this time by Charles d’Anjou, and was later annexed to France by Henri IV in 1481, but it was not until Louis XIV took the throne that the biggest transformations of the port began; he pulled down the city walls in 1666 and expanded the port to the Rive Neuve (New Riverbank). The city was devastated by plague in 1720, losing more than half its population. By the time of the Revolution, Marseille was on the rebound once again, with industries of soap manufacturing and oil processing flourishing, encouraging a wave of immigration from Provence and Italy. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, Marseille became the greatest boomtown in 19th-century Europe. With a large influx of immigrants from areas as exotic as Tangiers, the city quickly acquired the multicultural population it maintains to this day.

Marseille
Day 1

Tarragona, Spain

Date of arrival 29 May 2026
Tarragona
Day 2

Valencia, Spain

Date of arrival 30 May 2026

Valencia, Spain’s third-largest municipality, is a proud city with a thriving nightlife and restaurant scene, quality museums, and spectacular contemporary architecture, juxtaposed with a thoroughly charming historic quarter, making it a popular destination year in year out. During the Civil War, it was the last seat of the Republican Loyalist government (1935–36), holding out against Franco’s National forces until the country fell to 40 years of dictatorship. Today it represents the essence of contemporary Spain—daring design and architecture along with experimental cuisine—but remains deeply conservative and proud of its traditions. Though it faces the Mediterranean, Valencia’s history and geography have been defined most significantly by the River Turia and the fertile huerta that surrounds it.The city has been fiercely contested ever since it was founded by the Greeks. El Cid captured Valencia from the Moors in 1094 and won his strangest victory here in 1099: he died in the battle, but his corpse was strapped into his saddle and so frightened the besieging Moors that it caused their complete defeat. In 1102 his widow, Jimena, was forced to return the city to Moorish rule; Jaume I finally drove them out in 1238. Modern Valencia was best known for its frequent disastrous floods until the River Turia was diverted to the south in the late 1950s. Since then the city has been on a steady course of urban beautification. The lovely bridges that once spanned the Turia look equally graceful spanning a wandering municipal park, and the spectacularly futuristic Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències (City of Arts and Sciences), most of it designed by Valencia-born architect Santiago Calatrava, has at last created an exciting architectural link between this river town and the Mediterranean. If you’re in Valencia, an excursion to Albufera Nature Park is a worthwhile day trip.

Valencia
Day 4

Livorno, Italy

Date of arrival 1 Jun 2026

Livorno is a gritty city with a long and interesting history. In the early Middle Ages it alternately belonged to Pisa and Genoa. In 1421 Florence, seeking access to the sea, bought it. Cosimo I (1519–74) started construction of the harbor in 1571, putting Livorno on the map. After Ferdinando I de’ Medici (1549–1609) proclaimed Livorno a free city, it became a haven for people suffering from religious persecution; Roman Catholics from England and Jews and Moors from Spain and Portugal, among others, settled here. The Quattro Mori (Four Moors), also known as the Monument to Ferdinando I, commemorates this. (The statue of Ferdinando I dates from 1595, the bronze Moors by Pietro Tacca from the 1620s.)In the following centuries, and particularly in the 18th, Livorno boomed as a port. In the 19th century the town drew a host of famous Britons passing through on their grand tours. Its prominence continued up to World War II, when it was heavily bombed. Much of the town’s architecture, therefore, postdates the war, and it’s somewhat difficult to imagine what it might have looked like before. Livorno has recovered from the war, however, as it’s become a huge point of departure for container ships, as well as the only spot in Tuscany for cruise ships to dock for the day.Most of Livorno’s artistic treasures date from the 17th century and aren’t all that interesting unless you dote on obscure baroque artists. Livorno’s most famous native artist, Amedeo Modigliani (1884–1920), was of much more recent vintage. Sadly, there’s no notable work by him in his hometown.There may not be much in the way of art, but it’s still worth strolling around the city. The Mercato Nuovo, which has been around since 1894, sells all sorts of fruits, vegetables, grains, meat, and fish. Outdoor markets nearby are also chock-full of local color. The presence of Camp Darby, an American military base just outside town, accounts for the availability of many American products.If you have time, Livorno is worth a stop for lunch or dinner at the very least.

Livorno
Day 5

Civitavecchia, Italy

Date of arrival 2 Jun 2026

Italy’s vibrant capital lives in the present, but no other city on earth evokes its past so powerfully. For over 2,500 years, emperors, popes, artists, and common citizens have left their mark here. Archaeological remains from ancient Rome, art-stuffed churches, and the treasures of Vatican City vie for your attention, but Rome is also a wonderful place to practice the Italian-perfected il dolce far niente, the sweet art of idleness. Your most memorable experiences may include sitting at a caffè in the Campo de’ Fiori or strolling in a beguiling piazza.

Civitavecchia
Day 6

Genoa, Italy

Date of arrival 3 Jun 2026

Genoa is a port city in the Northwest of Italy. Home to the Genoa Aquarium, famous for having the largest exposition of biodiversity in Europe, the city is also a great place to visit for anyone interested in architecture.

Genoa
Day 7

Marseille, France

Date of arrival 4 Jun 2026

Since being designated a European Capital of Culture for 2013, with an estimated €660 million of funding in the bargain, Marseille has been in the throes of an extraordinary transformation, with no fewer than five major new arts centers, a beautifully refurbished port, revitalized neighborhoods, and a slew of new shops and restaurants. Once the underdog, this time-burnished city is now welcoming an influx of weekend tourists who have colonized entire neighborhoods and transformed them into elegant pieds-à-terre (or should we say, mer). The second-largest city in France, Marseille is one of Europe’s most vibrant destinations. Feisty and fond of broad gestures, it is also as complicated and as cosmopolitan now as it was when a band of Phoenician Greeks first sailed into the harbor that is today’s Vieux Port in 600 BC. Legend has it that on that same day a local chieftain’s daughter, Gyptis, needed to choose a husband, and her wandering eyes settled on the Greeks’ handsome commander Protis. Her dowry brought land near the mouth of the Rhône, where the Greeks founded Massalia, the most important Continental shipping port in antiquity. The port flourished for some 500 years as a typical Greek city, enjoying the full flush of classical culture, its gods, its democratic political system, its sports and theater, and its naval prowess. Caesar changed all that, besieging the city in 49 BC and seizing most of its colonies. In 1214 Marseille was seized again, this time by Charles d’Anjou, and was later annexed to France by Henri IV in 1481, but it was not until Louis XIV took the throne that the biggest transformations of the port began; he pulled down the city walls in 1666 and expanded the port to the Rive Neuve (New Riverbank). The city was devastated by plague in 1720, losing more than half its population. By the time of the Revolution, Marseille was on the rebound once again, with industries of soap manufacturing and oil processing flourishing, encouraging a wave of immigration from Provence and Italy. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, Marseille became the greatest boomtown in 19th-century Europe. With a large influx of immigrants from areas as exotic as Tangiers, the city quickly acquired the multicultural population it maintains to this day.

Marseille

Tarragona, Spain

Date of arrival 5 Jun 2026
Tarragona
Day 8

Tarragona, Spain

Date of arrival 5 Jun 2026
Tarragona

Cabin Options

MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Deluxe Interior WEB ©MSC Rights.jpg

Deluxe Interior

Welcome to the Deluxe Interior aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Inside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 150ft² (14m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Premium Suite Aurea 1 ©MSC Rights - Ivan Sarfatti.jpg

Premium Suite Aurea

Welcome to the Premium Suite Aurea aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Suite
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 323ft² (30m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Deluxe Balcony Aurea 1 ©MSC Rights - Ivan Sarfatti.jpg

Deluxe Balcony Aurea

Welcome to the Deluxe Balcony Aurea aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 247ft² (23m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Premium Balcony 1 ©MSC Rights - Ivan Sarfatti.jpg

Premium Balcony

Welcome to the Premium Balcony aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 247ft² (23m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Deluxe Balcony 1 ©MSC Rights - Ivan Sarfatti.jpg

Deluxe Balcony

Welcome to the Deluxe Balcony aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 161ft² (15m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Deluxe Balcony 1 ©MSC Rights - Ivan Sarfatti.jpg

Deluxe Balcony with Partial View

Welcome to the Deluxe Balcony with Partial View aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 247ft² (23m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Deluxe Balcony 1 ©MSC Rights - Ivan Sarfatti.jpg

Guarantee Balcony

Welcome to the Guarantee Balcony aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 247ft² (23m²)
MSC Cruises ORCHESTRA Ocean 1.png

Deluxe Ocean View

Welcome to the Deluxe Ocean View aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 172ft² (16m²)
MSC Cruises ORCHESTRA Ocean 1.png

Deluxe Ocean View with Obstructed View

Welcome to the Deluxe Ocean View with Obstructed View aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 172ft² (16m²)
MSC Cruises ORCHESTRA Ocean 1.png

Guarantee Outside

Welcome to the Guarantee Outside aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Outside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 172ft² (16m²)
MSC Cruises MSC Orchestra Deluxe Interior WEB ©MSC Rights.jpg

Guarantee Inside

Welcome to the Guarantee Inside aboard the MSC Orchestra from MSC Cruises, your home away from home. Your private abode includes a range of amenities for your enjoyment, relaxation and comfort.
Room Type Inside
Occupancy 2 persons
Size 150ft² (14m²)

Ship Facilities

Dining
Enrichment
Entertainment
Health & Fitness
Younger Travellers

About the Ship

Combining spacious, elegant interiors with fine dining, varied entertainment programme and high-quality, resort-style amenities, MSC Orchestra promises you a dream cruise. With a choice of countless different ways to relax and enjoy yourself each day, life aboard can be just what you want it to be.

Msc orchestra

Msc orchestra Information

Launched 2007
Length 964 ft (294m)
Guest Capacity 3223
Cabins 1275
Crew Members 940

Deck Plans

Deck 4 - Violoncello

  • Tender Access
  • Lift

Deck 5 - Pianoforte

  • Villa Borghese Ristorante
  • L’Inconto Bar
  • Reception – Guest Services
  • Medical Center
  • Deluxe Ocean View
  • Deluxe Interior
  • Lift

Deck 6 - Violino

  • Convent Garden Theatre
  • The Savannah Bar
  • Orchestra Sala Riunioni
  • MSC Logo Shop
  • The Amber Bar
  • Accessories Shop
  • The Mini Mall
  • Cipria Cosmetic Shop
  • Madison Avenue Boutique
  • MSC Travel Agency
  • Lo Zaffira Jewellery
  • The Purple Bar
  • Zaffiro Bar
  • L’lbiscus Ristorante
  • Lift

Deck 7 - Saxofono

  • Convent Garden Theatre
  • Palm Beach Casino
  • Card Room
  • Art Arcade
  • Library
  • Shanghai
  • La Cubana Cigar Room
  • Internet Cafe
  • La Cantinellla Wine Bar
  • Photo Gallery
  • Photo Shop
  • The Shaker Lounge
  • Lift

Deck 8 - Arpa
  • Lift
  • Deluxe Ocean View (2x Accessible)
  • Premium Balcony
  • Deluxe Interior
  • Junior Ocean View with Obstructed View
Deck 9 - Viola

  • Lift
  • Deluxe Balcony Aurea
  • Premium Balcony (2x Accessible)
  • Deluxe Balcony
  • Deluxe Interior

Deck 10 - Lira

  • Lift
  • Deluxe Balcony Aurea
  • Premium Balcony
  • Deluxe Balcony
  • Deluxe Interior (2x Accessible)

Deck 11 - Flauto
  • Lift
  • Deluxe Balcony Aurea
  • Premium Balcony
  • Deluxe Balcony
  • Deluxe Interior (2x Accessible)
Deck 12 - Clarinetto
  • Lift
  • Deluxe Balcony
  • Premium Balcony
  • Deluxe Interior (2x Accessible)
  • Deluxe Balcony with Partial View
Deck 13 - Mandolino

  • Lift
  • La Piazzetta Buffet
  • Acapulco Pool Area
  • Whirlpool Bath
  • El Sombrero Pool Bar
  • Cala Blanca Pool Area
  • Barracuda Bar
  • MSC Aurea Spa

Deck 14 - Chitarra
  • R32 Disco
  • Junior Club
  • Teen Club
  • Virtual Games
  • Shuffleboard
  • Children Indoor Playroom
  • Children Outdoor Pool & Games
  • Power Walking Track
  • Lift
  • Premium Balcony
  • Deluxe Interior (2x Accessible)
Deck 15 - Xilofono

  • Mini Golf
  • Shuffleboard
  • Premium Suite Aurea
  • Premium Balcony (1x Accessible)
  • Deluxe Interior
  • Lift

Deck 16 - Sport

  • Top 16 Exclusive Solarium
  • Sports Centre

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