Soy De Durango plunges us into the pulse-pounding world of a proud Duranguense who has climbed the ranks of a risky, outlawed business. The narrator tips his hat to the vieja escuela—the old-school code of honor—while name-checking Joaquín Loera, better known as El Chapo. Between rugged memories of the sierra and the constant hum of danger, he celebrates survival: guarding his pistol, riding in a diamond-studded armored Cayenne, and staying two steps ahead of the “tiburones” that circle his territory.
At its core, the song is a modern corrido of grit and swagger. It mixes loyalty to one’s roots with the high-stakes reality of drug-trade politics: counting cash, watching over the plaza, and partying hard yet calculating every move. Through vivid snapshots—cigarette in hand, live band at dawn, bullets never far away—La Adictiva paints a portrait of someone who knows the rules of the crooked game but walks his own straight line within it. The message is clear: time changes, problems pile up, yet this son of Durango is still standing, unflinching, and ready for whatever comes next.