In recent years Yes have become the loneliest of all imaginable hearts-club bands, swept aside by the often unthinking critical consensus which says that prog rock is simply irredeemable. So there's something wickedly satisfying in the knowledge that this big and bouncy 'Owner' remix by wigmeister Max Graham became one of the dance floor hits of 2005. If you want to hear it in its original context, Steven Sodebergh's 1984/5 Yes - 9012Live has just been re-released on DVD. Aside from Chris Squire's looping bass bridge, which is edited out, Graham has been surprisingly faithful to the original, too - opting for the rhythm of lurve rather than the topographic toe-tapping of 'Twelve Inches on Tape' (an earlier generation of '80s Yes dance remixes, still worth checking out). It's stripped-down and souped-up, all at the same time. One for the uppers. In short, while Trevor Rabin's pop craft may not be to everybody's taste (fans of the excursive, multilayered Yes of the '70s and danceaholics may be surprisingly at one on this), 'Owner Of A Lonely Heart' has an enduring quality which you can't quite ignore. A tricky little table-turner.