I can't answer your specific question (about that pressing of the Diana Krall record), but answering your general question is complicated. Vinyl is unexpectedly hot again after spending a generation in near dormancy. Most companies are pushing out product not because they're analog purists but because there's money to be made.
The reality is that most current vinyl is mastered from a digital source (indeed, almost all recordings these days are made digitally). That doesn't mean they can't sound great or even better than their digital counterparts but, unless you stick with the respected audiophile labels (AP, MoFi, Intervention, Speakers Corner, etc), chances are pretty good that the new LP record you buy will be a digital recording pressed onto noisy vinyl. For an analog purist, that's the worst of both worlds: the disadvantages of digital and vinyl in one package.
Of course, there are many, many wonderful-sounding LPs from the 1950s, '60s, and '70s out there in used record stores, and they're worth seeking out. Condition is key though, and prices aren't cheap. As for new music, it's probably going to sound just as good or better and cost less when bought as a CD or streamed from uncompressed digital files.
Also a factor is the cost of an analog set up that can rival great-sounding digital equipment these days. You need a turntable, a cartridge, and a phono stage to play vinyl. To match the equivalent quality in digital equipment (a disc player or, more likely, a DAC and a way to stream digital files) requires an asymmetrical investment. Does spending $5000 on a TT, cart, and phono stage really sound better than a $1000 DAC and a subscription to a streaming service?
Maybe to some of us, but it's no slam dunk.
Perhaps all this is old news to you. If so, sorry for coming off as pedantic. And negative. But if you're new to vinyl, I advise being cautious. Buy some of your favorite music on vinyl and see what you think, what your ears hear.
Seems to me that much of the vinyl boon these days is generated by a backlash against the absence of physical media. It's fun to hold a record cover and see a needle in a groove, especially if you were born within the last 30 years. For a lot of people, it's not about the sonics but the experience. I respect that, but how long will it last? It's a cultural moment in time, not an acknowledgement of analog's technological superiority. (And I write that as a vinyl lover.)