Keep in mind that the albums you describe helped to create the market that we enjoy today.
Yeah - I still have fondness for LPs from the '50s & '60s, but some of their content was so significantly altered from their original sources that I wonder how many customers noticed that the music they are listening to on disc is not the actual music heard in the respective movies or TV shows.
I also mentioned MANNIX in my post, but I vastly prefer the new re-recording over the old album. Not that the old album is bad by any means, but I prefer the "lusher" sound of the new one.
Alright, even though they were rerecordings, I might as well include Mancini's "Peter Gunn" albums ("Fallout!" on the first album is a standout track) and Goldsmith's "Q.B.VII" (which contained TWO different covers of Goldsmith in the lower right hand corner conducting with with white with black type, the second one the other way around), though I loved Nic Raine and the City Of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra's recording of the complete score on Prometheus.
Just a few that come to mind "VICTORY AT SEA", "VALIANT YEARS" Richard Rodgers, "WORLD WAR 1" Morton Gould, "GE THEATER" Elmer Bernstein and of course Goldsmith's "RED PONY, "PLAYHOUSE 90" "MASADA", "QBV11,"THE WALTONS" and "DR KILDARE" and many many more.