Kesha's Verse, Final A/B & The Print
The series ends with a bang. Austin works through Kesha's verse (one of the most movement-heavy vocal performances in the session) applying Soothe at 50% mix to tame what static EQ can't, rolling off the top end to focus intelligibility, and resisting the urge to add reverb to a vocal that's already talking too fast to need it. He then does a full A/B comparison between his mix and the reference rough, pausing to explain exactly what changed and why it makes you want to move your body. The final print reveals a cohesive, punchy, loudness-competitive master that clips out of Pro Tools with zero audible distortion. Austin closes with a candid reflection on the biggest lessons from the entire series, including the one takeaway he says engineers take the longest to learn: lead vocals don't need to be as bright as you think.
Key takeaways: Soothe on a dynamic vocal performance, Kesha vocal treatment, A/B comparison technique, final print and export philosophy, series recap and professional reflection.