Adam Robison | Buy at photos.djournal.comAt The Saxophone Place in Tupelo, Perry Barker, left, and Joe Holloway buy, repair and sell instruments for high school and college bands. Adam Robison | Buy at photos.djournal.com Joe Holloway uses a magnet a ball to knock dents out of a sousaphone. By M. Scott Morris Daily Journal TUPELO – Even if a musician treats her instrument like a holy relic, it’s guaranteed to fall apart in small ways over time. “After so many years, the pads will rot out,” Joe Holloway, 76, said. “You’re talking felt, you’re talking cork, and you’re talking about screws that vibrate and turn themselves loose,” said 71-year-old Perry Barker, “and you’re talking about pressure on keys.” “Normal wear and tear,” Holloway said. As the owners of The Saxophone Place in Tupelo, the pair have seen instruments in various states of disrepair, and they know many haven’t been treated like holy relics. “Some kids just throw them down.