If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. Busta Rhyme s isn’t one to predict how his records will be received decades down the line — then again, he never expected that nowadays, most people would be experiencing performances of those same records with a phone in their hands. When Rhymes first released his classic “Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See” in 1997, he couldn’t imagine that not only would countless contemporary artists but their own modern spin on the track, but that concert-goers would be modernizing their own viewing habits with Ray-Ban’s new high-tech Meta smart glasses .

“At the end of the day, we never make these records thinking that you’ll still be able to hear it thirty years later,” Rhymes tells Rolling Stone over email, “let alone be able to have it be the center of a campaign for technology in the future that you actually like.” Since its chart-topping release, Rhymes has revisited “Put Your Hands” once again for a brand new campaign for Ray-Ban . To kick things off, the brand recently hosted a special “hands-free” experience celebrating the latest smart glasses collection.

Rhymes, Offset and Little Simz performed at the one-night only experiential concert in Brooklyn, NY, along with special appearances by Coi Leray and Rhymes’ son Trillian and music from DJ Saige — all donning their tinted Meta glasses . As far as sma.