The highest new entry in the Top 40 this week is "Human Nature" by Michael Jackson. That's right, the most popular new record from a chart perspective is a 44 year old song by an artist who died 17 years ago.
The reason it's the highest new entry is due to the Michael Jackson biopic coming out and the fact it was never released as a single in the UK when it was a new song.
OK renewed interest in old music because of films is nothing new. We had "Unchained Melody" by the Righteous Brothers top the charts in 1990 because of it's inclusion in the film "Ghost" for example. The Temptations didn't make the Top 40 with "My Girl" until 1992 when a film of the same name came out.
The difference is these were the main songs from those films which got rereleased as singles. "Human Nature" may be the only new entry as such but more of his previous Top 40 hits are re-entering the Top 40. If it was for the 3 song cap there would no doubt be more Michael Jackson songs in the Top 40 at the moment.
It comes back to the question of is it really a singles chart anymore?
The fact of the matter is that "Human Nature" appears on the "Thriller" album which is the biggest selling album of all time. Given the sheer quantity of people who own the album its quite possible that on a given week back in the day more people were listening to "Human Nature" than whatever was number one in the charts that week.
We'll never know if that is the case because there was no way of tracking what people were listening to on their record player. Now we have streaming so we can measure, but is this really what should be reflected in the singles chart?
I don't have the answer. The fact is "Human Nature" is 1 of just 2 new entries in May so far to make the Top 10. The other is a Chemical Brothers record from 2015.