By Alvin "aqua" Blanco
Khia has never been afraid to let loose her speech. Whether it was demanding where men could put their tongues on her “My Neck, My Back” smash, extensively berating her female rap rivals Trina and Jacki-O or brashly declaring her business independence, Khia always speaks freely. Sure she proudly pontificates on the preparation for her third album,
Nasti Girl, set to drop in the summer of ’08. But, Khia’s voice takes a turn from cool, collected excitement to passionate vitriol when a thorny topic arises. In this case it was the Florida girl’s feelings of being slighted by Michael Jackson’s sister after appearing on Ms. Jackson’s 2006 album
20 Y.O. Read for yourself...
AllHipHop.com: You’re now signed to Big Cat Records, what made you decide to roll with them?
Khia: It's just respecting the independent grind. Me being an independent artist I felt that us as a team, we can make something happen, so it's a perfect marriage.
AllHipHop.com: Definitely. Did Big Cat approach you or did you approach them?
Khia: They approached me. I've been knowing Cat for like five years. So the partnership was easy. [It’s a] joint venture; Thug Misses Entertainment/ Big Cat Records.

AllHipHop.com: How hard has the indie grind been?
Khia: I love it, I love it. You know if you want your money independent is the way. If you want fame and want to be on TV and fool the public you want a major. Really, independently if you do your promotions and have your set fan base…700,000…50,000…10,000 you're making your money.
AllHipHop.com: Since you had such a big hit off the bat a lot of people artists jumped on the major label and basically got stuck. Did somebody pull your coat the benefits of independence?
Khia: Well I went independent the first time out with Artemis with the distribution but they were an independent label too and it was more with less people at the round table. With the majors you have a lot of people to pay, they have big budgets you know they give the deals with a lot of the major producers, major writers whoever's hot at the time that's who they use. You really don't have control. With me being a writer and a producer and an artist I like to have artistic control. When you sign with the majors you lose a lot of that and then you have a lot of money that you have to pay back that sometimes you don't even sell the records to recoup the cost. So for me dealing with Artemis, an independent label it was more and better for me so I decided to stay that route.
AllHipHop.com: Now on the new album
Nasti Muzik, how have you developed?
Khia: Oh I'm so excited because I'm singing on this album. I did all of the production on this album. I did produce the other ones as well, but on this one I'm doing a little singing and I want to be respected. I don't even want to be in the same category as the female rappers anymore because I'm not just a rapper; I'm an artist, I'm a producer, I'm a music composer, a song creator. People [will] begin to see that. It's a fun album. It's not just rap and just hard and street. It's artistic and it's playful and it's fun and it's concept driven. It's still nasty and I'm still going off now…but it's fun.
AllHipHop.com: Is there a certain aspect you enjoy more between songwriting or production?
Khia: Ohhh I love it all. I just love music so I don't know, I love it all. I love to sing, I love to rap, I love to write, I love to produce and you know I'm hands on with everything. Every part of my project from the writing to the production to the mixing—I love it all. A lot of artists they just go in the booth and leave it for somebody else to do and to make it their own. And for me every song is my own.
AllHipHop.com: Ok, what equipment do you prefer to use?
Khia: I'm Pro Tools. And I'm not a Pro Tools genius but I work with different engineers and different producers that can go in and get what I need to be done. So Pro Tools is the way; I love my MPC I love my beat machine. I love just being able to come up with beats and then working with people that can just bring them to life. If there's a specific sound that I want I can find people to come in and play it live.