Khia is an American rapper from Tampa, Florida who broke through with one of the most notorious and unfiltered club records of the early 2000s. "My Neck, My Back", released in 2002, was an explicit, no-nonsense anthem of female sexual demand set to a stark, hypnotic beat, and its sheer bluntness made it an underground smash that crossed over into the mainstream charts.
Khia kept recording and remained a combative, outspoken presence in hip-hop, but no later release approached the cultural footprint of that debut hit.
On streaming, "My Neck, My Back" sits near 181 million plays, while her next most-streamed track trails at around 13 million. That sends the ratio above 14, far past our 5.0 line.
By our measure Khia is a certified one-hit wonder. Hers is a familiar early-2000s story with a provocative edge: an artist who arrived with one frank, impossible-to-ignore club track that became a word-of-mouth phenomenon, then found the wider spotlight hard to recapture, leaving that single, defiantly direct hit standing far ahead of everything else in her catalogue. Blunt as it was, the song became a lasting club and meme staple, and on streams it remains, by a wide margin, the track her name calls to mind.