El Cielo A Un Diablo is a bold confession set to an infectious Colombian beat. The narrator speaks straight to a woman who hopes to tame his wandering heart, but he quickly reminds her who he is: someone who chases pleasure, not promises. Lines like “Bebé, le estás pidiendo el cielo a un diablo” paint a vivid image—she is asking the impossible, requesting heavenly devotion from someone who openly calls himself a devil. In playful yet blunt verses, he admits her attraction is only a “capricho” and warns that love stories featuring Cupid simply “don’t sell around here.”
Underneath the catchy rhythm, the song explores the clash between romantic expectations and raw honesty. Rather than sugar-coating his intentions, The La Planta (with Pushi’s production flair) lets listeners hear an unfiltered manifesto of modern, commitment-free relationships. The lively instrumental might invite you to dance, but the lyrics remind you to keep your head clear: if you try to make a lover out of this self-proclaimed diablo, you will end up chasing the sun on a cold day—an impossible mission.