Mas Sabe El Diablo -
If you ask Wisin, Yandel, or Tego, the answer is clear. Respect the old devil. He’s still alive for a reason. What’s your take? Do you prefer the angel’s hope or the devil’s wisdom? Drop a comment below.
Tego raps about the importance of silence, of watching, and of remembering. He suggests that true power isn’t in throwing punches or flashing cash, but in and restraint . He knows that the person who has survived the longest in the game is the one who knows how to listen.
Beyond the Beat: Why “Más Sabe el Diablo” is Reggaeton’s Ultimate Lesson in Street Wisdom Mas Sabe el Diablo
The song argues that the devil is more useful in a crisis. Why? Because he has made the mistakes. He knows the traps. He recognizes the liar because he used to be one. The song doesn’t glorify evil; it glorifies —the ability to see through the bullshit.
While Wisin & Yandel hold down the melody, Tego Calderón’s verse is the thesis statement of the song. He talks about the "old school" vs. the "new school." He criticizes arrogance—the young blood who thinks he knows everything because he has a little money or a gun. If you ask Wisin, Yandel, or Tego, the answer is clear
The title borrows from the old Spanish adage: "Más sabe el diablo por viejo que por diablo" (The devil knows more because he is old than because he is the devil). The original saying means that experience trumps raw power.
Is "Más Sabe el Diablo" just a reggaeton track? Absolutely not. It is a survival manual set to a dembow beat . It forces us to ask an uncomfortable question: Do we value the innocence of the angel, or the sharp, cutting intelligence of the devil who has seen it all? What’s your take
In many Latin American countries (and the diaspora), there is a cultural reverence for the Viejo Sabio (the Wise Old Man). But in urban sectors, that old man often isn't a scholar; he’s the guy who played the game for thirty years and lived to tell about it.