
Michael Jackson’s “Remember the Time” is climbing Spotify’s global chart in 2026, and the streaming numbers back it up. The 1992 single from the Dangerous album hit a new personal peak of #166 on the global chart this week, recording 1.406 million streams in the process.
The milestone was flagged by @chartdata on X. The post pulled in over 3,500 likes and nearly 400 retweets.
That kind of organic traction is worth noting. There’s no new reissue tied to this run, no obvious anniversary push, and no confirmed sync placement driving plays. The song is simply finding new listeners. It’s also reminding longtime ones why it connected so hard in the first place.
“Remember the Time” dropped in January 1992 as the second single from the Dangerous album. That record landed in November 1991 and went on to sell over 32 million copies worldwide. The single climbed to #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and hit the top of the R&B charts as well. Not bad for a track that’s now old enough to rent a car.
The song came with one of the most memorable music videos of the decade. Directed by John Singleton, the clip was set in ancient Egypt. It featured Eddie Murphy as the Pharaoh, Iman as his queen, and Magic Johnson in a supporting role. At that point in his career, Jackson was raising the bar for what a music video could be. This was a big-budget, full-imagination production, and it showed.
More than three decades later, those visuals still circulate on YouTube. New listeners find them constantly. That kind of timeless packaging helps catalogue records like this one keep finding fresh ears on streaming platforms.
Jackson passed away in June 2009, but his catalogue has stayed remarkably active on streaming. Tracks from Thriller, Dangerous, and Bad keep cycling through charts and editorial playlists. His estate and Sony Music have kept his recordings visible. Each generation seems to rediscover him on its own terms.
A chart position of #166 globally isn’t a number one moment. But 1.406 million streams in a single reporting window is genuinely strong for a 34-year-old album cut. Landing anywhere on Spotify’s global top 200 puts a song in rare company. The list refreshes daily and draws from hundreds of millions of listeners across dozens of countries.
What makes this run interesting is the apparent lack of a catalyst. No film dropped it in a trailer. No viral dance challenge attached itself to the track. No major celebrity covered it or sampled it in a recent release. The numbers just moved. That kind of organic momentum doesn’t happen by accident.
It’s worth remembering that catalogue tracks face real competition on streaming. New releases flood the platform every week. Algorithms favor fresh content. Breaking through the noise after 34 years takes genuine listener demand.
Streaming has changed how we measure a song’s life. Back in 1992, “Remember the Time” had a chart run and a video run. Then it faded from weekly rankings like most singles do. Now a song can resurface years later, hit a personal streaming peak, and remind everyone. It never really went away.
For Michael Jackson‘s catalogue, moments like this are becoming routine. Tracks bubble up, numbers climb, and listeners old and new hit play. “Remember the Time” is doing exactly that right now – quietly stacking streams on one of the most-listened platforms in the world. Three decades in, and the King of Pop is still getting new spins.
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