The 1941 song features lyrics by June Hershey and music by Don Swander. In 1942, Five versions of the song were on the Billboard charts, with three in the top 10.
"Deep in the Heart of Texas" spent five weeks at the top of Your Hit Parade in 1942 during its twelve weeks stay.[4]
Alvino Rey and his Orchestra (vocal by Bill Schallen and Skeets Herfurt), recorded November 21, 1941, Bluebird 11391)[5] – this topped the Billboard charts in 1942 during a ten-week stay.[6]
The Merry Macs – recorded December 23, 1941 for Decca Records, catalogue No. 4136.[8] Chart position peak No. 11[6]
Bing Crosby with Woody Herman and his Woodchoppers (recorded January 18, 1942,[9] Decca 4162)[10][11] This reached the No. 3 spot in the charts in 1942.[6]
Horace Heidt's Musical Knights – recorded January 28, 1942, Columbia 36525[12][11] – this achieved a top position of No. 7.[6]
In 1942, the BBC banned the song during working hours on the grounds that its infectious melody might cause wartime factory-hands to neglect their tools while they clapped in time with the song.[23][24]
Country music singer and native Texan George Strait has the song played before he gets on stage.[citation needed]
It was used along with two other songs in the second segment for the Audio-Animatronic, Dolly Dimples, in the original Chuck E Cheese Pizza Time Theatre (now called Chuck E in San Jose, California from 1977 to 1982.
^Ted Weems And His Orchestra; Perry Como; Don Swander; June Hershey (1941-12-09), Deep in the Heart of Texas, Internet Archive, Decca, retrieved 2021-07-19
^Smith, Kathleen E.R. (28 March 2003). God Bless America: Tin Pan Alley Goes to War. The University Press of Kentucky. p. 25. ISBN0-8131-2256-2.