Re: Star Trek: Nemesis - The Deluxe Edition Soundtrack from Varèse Sar
Not when one considers project scope.
They didn't recreate the edits that were made for post production, simply presented the complete cues as recorded and mixed ready for post production.
I've heard this crop up for many soundtracks, however the composer's intended version of the music really should win out.
For the edit of that cue, one has the DVD/Blu-Ray, but for the cue as the composer intended, we have the CD.
I think there's a place where a new cue was created from pieces of other cues editorially, but this wasn't recreated either for the same reason.
Basically, you have every second of music recorded for the movie, and mixed for the movie, in their original form.
If they had gone the route of recreating the film edits of cues, it becomes a gray area, an you end up considering whether to recreate things like volume fluctuations, whether to provide it from the music stems from post production to get the exact film edits etc., and rather than get a listenable album, you get an isolated score.
See The Phantom Menace Ultimate Edition for details on how bad that turns out.
The music is there, as recorded and mixed, but the film edit was not recreated.
So not as used in the film.
Just seems a little strange - the notes mention that for some of the tracks the mix was altered rather than Jerry's prefered 'live' performances - so both were included, yet it then leaves out that edit.
It's not a partically tidy edit, but it was used in the film. With a new shortened reprisal to end Jerry's time on the franchise
Not when one considers project scope.

They didn't recreate the edits that were made for post production, simply presented the complete cues as recorded and mixed ready for post production.
I've heard this crop up for many soundtracks, however the composer's intended version of the music really should win out.
For the edit of that cue, one has the DVD/Blu-Ray, but for the cue as the composer intended, we have the CD.
I think there's a place where a new cue was created from pieces of other cues editorially, but this wasn't recreated either for the same reason.
Basically, you have every second of music recorded for the movie, and mixed for the movie, in their original form.
If they had gone the route of recreating the film edits of cues, it becomes a gray area, an you end up considering whether to recreate things like volume fluctuations, whether to provide it from the music stems from post production to get the exact film edits etc., and rather than get a listenable album, you get an isolated score.
See The Phantom Menace Ultimate Edition for details on how bad that turns out.