I bought the US version of this album (there is a US and a Europe version). I had a German pressing of this from Midi, which was very mediocre and this copy definitely beat that one.
I don't object, in theory, to a digital to vinyl recording and I'm on-board with Rhino pressings. Most digital vinyl is bad, but there are some good ones. The Rhino pressings of Black Sabbath and Paranoid (from the 2000's) lack the detail of the originals, but they have a tubey warmth that feels really good (same thing with 1970 from the Stooges). I think those were probably mastered from the tapes, but Rhino knows good sound.
The problem I have with this pressing is that it has a fairly high noise floor and a low signal level; I assume they should have been able to do something about the noise in the remastering.
Compared to my original US copy of Band and E Street Choir, the noise level in the track breaks is about the same and this reissue of Astral definitely has more of that digital refinement. However, E Street has a notably higher signal level, so it does a much better job of cutting though the noise to make it more engaging. With the Astral reissue I find myself wanting, but unable to cut through the noise to get to the music as soon as the needle drops. This may well be the best available version of this classic, but against my other albums that I'd classify as a 10, based solely on sound quality, I couldn't rate this one higher than 8.
For a Sound Quality of 10 with Van I'd go to the 1979, Direct-Disk (Japanese), half-speed pressing of Moondance. In a A-B comparison with this Astral reissue, the noise is at least 50% lower and the music absolutely jumps off the album, with fantastic treble extension.