After careful consideration of the cover I wanted to look at the individual LP's me of course. Lo and behold, I can not get out. Even with moderately strong pull I could not take them out of the cover.
What happened?
The inner sleeves have glued in the fold of the cover! The LP's are connected to the inner sleeves to say so sunk into a groove, the whole has glued itself and then gets laid.
Beautiful Sch ... I thought to myself, went once with his hand in the cover with your fingers and tried to solve inner-sleeve from the cover. This increased caution, because if you accesses stretches far into the cover you on too much and it caused it unsightly folds and creases, on the one annoyed later. But in the end I had no success with this method. The glue in the rebate was just too strong. What the whole was ever stuck to me only mystery.
Well, I thought to myself - if it does not work with love ...
I got myself out of the kitchen a blunt doctor blade (sounds brutal - but it is not), drove it back into the cover, trying in this way with a subtle, gentle prodding and a bit of pressure to solve inner-sleeve from the cover. So even the cover is not too stretched. The vinyl itself can happen anything, the inner sleeves are made of thick cardboard. This second attempt was then crowned with success. After a few minutes poking around I had made it and the inner sleeves are left intact, so no tears or glue residues. The important thing is: slow action and not throw away the nerves! There is no need to panic. Use with caution and patience that is easy to create!
With this guide I hope to have helped anyone who should have the same problem.
Conclusion: if you so "The Rolling Stones Live at the Hampton Coliseum in 1981" from a set 3LP + DVD Edition, then it behaves like a Surprise egg. It has been three times what it:
Something for the ears, something for the eye and something for crafting!