I've not known that Behringer test disc, but I like it.
Track 83 is a recording of pink noise. Playing that track, on only one speaker, while walking around the room, is a good way to listen to a speaker's dispersion of mid range and higher frequencies, it's off-axis response. You will notice a shift in the overall tone of the pink noise, from brighter to less bright, as you move from directly in front of the speaker (on-axis) to farther away from the center (off-axis).
When manually tuned FM radio in stereo receivers was common, it was easy to tune the radio to a frequency where there was no signal. The hiss between stations was good enough to substitute for pink noise and allowed a simple test of a speaker's dispersion. With digitally tuned FM radio, that became more difficult. Track 83 on the Behringer disc makes it easy again.
By this method, you can easily compare two different speakers while in a store. Generally, I like wide dispersion better than narrow dispersion. With music, in stereo, wide dispersion creates a more realistic 'out-of-the-box sound image' where the music tends to sound like it is coming from outside the speaker cabinets. Narrow dispersion (beaming) tends to make the music sound like its coming from within the speaker cabinets.