Our Summer operating hours are:

Monday to Sunday - 9am - 7:30pm

Our Winter operating hours are:

Monday to Sunday - 9am - 5pm
Wednesdays, Fridays & Saturdays - Extended hours until 7:30pm subject to weather conditions.

Opening hours will be reviewed and may be subject to change. Any changes will be notified to the Members in advance.

Outside these times please email: flightdesk@sherburnaeroclub.com

Music Box Ghibli -

It is a tiny, spinning universe. All you have to do is turn the key. Do you own a Ghibli music box? Which song would you want to hear as you fall asleep?

Here is why the marriage of Ghibli’s scores and the music box mechanism creates one of the most emotionally potent listening experiences in the world. Music boxes operate on a fundamental principle of imperfection. The notes are struck by tiny pins on a rotating cylinder, creating a sound that decays quickly—a plink that fades into silence before the next note arrives. music box ghibli

When that sound is used to play melodies from —the legendary animation house of Hayao Miyazaki—something almost alchemical happens. The music becomes more than a tune; it becomes a physical object: small, precious, and fragile. It is a tiny, spinning universe

This “wabi-sabi” quality perfectly mirrors the themes of Ghibli films. Think of My Neighbor Totoro : the magic isn't in grand explosions, but in the pitter-patter of soot gremlins or the rustle of leaves in the wind. When you hear the iconic "Path of the Wind" or "Stroll" played on a music box, the tempo slows down. The joy isn't frantic; it is wistful. Which song would you want to hear as you fall asleep

It sounds like a memory you didn’t know you had. Composer Joe Hisaishi is the architect of the Ghibli sound. While his scores are famous for sweeping strings and soaring pianos ( Merry-Go-Round of Life from Howl’s Moving Castle ), his melodies are structurally very simple. They rely on repetition and clear, singable intervals.

There is a specific sound that feels like falling into a dream. It’s not an orchestra, and it’s not a lullaby sung by a human voice. It is the delicate, slightly tinny, crystalline chime of a music box.