I believe the title is the Sheffield Drum Album. I have owned a D2D copy since it first came out and every digital recording I have heard of it (and I have the FIM recording) pale in comparison. As Myles said, the original is D2D and the best version Bruce could have possibly laid his hands on would have been the backup tape copy that was made during the session. Would Doug Sax actually let that master out of his sight or would FIM have been given a first generation copy of the tape?
The Drum Album does come in handy as a reference piece to evaluate your speakers and amp and I primarily use the side that has Jim Keltner drumming. I would never think of playing this LP as music to just sit back and listen to as it bores me to tears after having heard it a zillion times. Plus, I always found the vinyl on Sheffield D2D LPs to be noisy.
My copy is an original D2D and it is not very noisy. But when I take this and play it on other people's systems, I can tell the quality of their systems pretty quickly. Transients, dynamics and clarity.