Another that will be right up there would be Pachelbel's "Canon In D."
This famous canon is one section of a larger work, a partita. It was written for a small string ensemble-- I believe, 3 violins and 3 continuos (string bass). So all piano arrangements currently on the market are transcriptions. Over the years, I have managed to collect at least 6 or 7 different arrangements for solo piano. Several are godawful. A couple are pretty decent.
At the library, I recently checked out two CD albums -- each was a collection of arrangements of "Canon in D." Many for piano, but some for piano duet, for Pan pipes, for flute, for chamber orchestra, for violin, for choir, and on and on. A few of these were very impressive, most were borderline junky.
Each album had about 14 to 18 respective recordings of the canon, and the two albums-- from two entirely different music studios -- did NOT have the same recordings. So between the two recordings, one found about 25 previously recorded tracks of this piece.
For solo piano of this piece, I personally like the Robert Schultz arrangement best.