0
OutKast
OutKast
American hip hop duo
1
Bubba Sparxxx
Bubba Sparxxx
American rapper
2
Diamond
Diamond
American rapper
3
Keri Hilson
Keri Hilson
American singer, songwriter and actress from Georgia
4
Missy Elliott
Missy Elliott
American rapper, songwriter and record producer from Virginia
5
Ray J
Ray J
American singer, songwriter, rapper, entrepreneur and actor from California
6
Timbaland
Timbaland
American musician, record producer, rapper, DJ, and record executive
7
Organized Noize
Organized Noize
American production team from Atlanta, Georgia
8
Lil' Kim
Lil' Kim
American rapper, actress and model from New York
9
Foxy Brown
Foxy Brown
American rapper, model, and actress
10
Mia X
Mia X
American rapper
11
MC Lyte
MC Lyte
American rapper, DJ, actress and entrepreneur
12
Nicki Minaj
Nicki Minaj
Trinidadian-American rapper, singer, songwriter, actress, and model
13
Ludacris
Ludacris
American rapper and actor
14
Geto Boys
Geto Boys
American hip-hop group
15
Cardi B
Cardi B
American rapper
16
Omillio Sparks
Omillio Sparks
American rapper
17
Total
Total
American band
18
Fabolous
Fabolous
American rapper from New York
Intro
American rapper
Record Labels

Kim Davis, better known by her stage name of Choice or MC Choice, is an American female rapper based out of Houston, Texas. She is best known for her album The Big Payback, which first came out in 1990. Signed to the label Rap-A-Lot Records, her strident, sexually explicit album prefigured the image and sound of later female rappers such as Lil' Kim, with music journalist Roni Sarig mentioning Choice in Third Coast: Outkast, Timbaland, and How Hip-Hop Became a Southern Thing as one of the U.S. south's underground kings and queens of rap alongside the Geto Boys and Street Military.

She first appeared on Willie D's 1989 album Controversy (with him then known as "Willie Dee"). The release ended up peaking at #53 on the U.S. R&B Albums chart. Ironically, Choice would soon criticize Willie D in a diss track also aimed at various male MCs of the time (such as Ice Cube).

Choice belongs to a more "sex"-based lyrical school of hard-core female rappers as opposed to those with a more "gangsta" sound. Artists in this subgenre espouse female-in-charge sexuality in their lyrics, often mixing being assertive in what they want while also mocking the exaggerated sexual boasts of male rappers through put-downs. Specific song examples of Choice's strident image include the oral sex-themed track "Cat Got Your Tongue".