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coach official outlet your eyes can see, that really ties it all together," said Amy Mackenzie, a band volunteer.This year, the school is performing music by American composer Aaron Copland and the marching band is determined to evoke a full frontier setting.The group's visual captain, Jessica Chinchock, has been busy commissioning large backdrops depicting wheat fields, mountains and horses to be wheeled onto the field during some of the "cowboy oriented" numbers."You want the music to be represented visually," director Sonia Straley said.The band will perform some "galloping, singing and stepping," and the color guard will round out the show with rifles and flags splashed with a playful red pony."You see what you hear and you hear what you see and that's what you're judged on," Straley said.Ephrata is one of several competition bands in the county rolling out elaborate shows this fall, using a combination of backdrops, costumes, props and unique formations to tell a story or communicate a theme."The visual aspect helps to answer, 'Why are they playing that music? Why are they moving that way?" Penn Manor director Tom Mumma said.In the past, Penn Manor has done a number of unique shows, such as enacting Edgar Allen Poe's "Tell Tale Heart," complete with students emerging from makeshift floorboards.This year, the band is doing a show called "Earth" and is hoping to work with the Millersville University art department on a 16 by 16 foot backdrop of land, water and sky to "tie it all together.""You build whatever you need to communicate your story," Mumma said.Ten local schools compete in the "Cavalcade of Bands," a