• 1947 – 1951

    Conservatory in Bratislava (trumpet, Adolf Scherbaum)

  • 1947 – 1949

    member of Dance Orchestra Of Bratislava Undergraduates focused on swing and partially modern jazz

  • since 1951

    member of Slovak Philharmonic

  • 1950 – 1952

    member of the group Kolektív (Collective)

  • 1951 – 1956

    member of The Orchestra Of Ján Siváček, leader of the trumpet section

  • 1956

    foundation of the group Dixieland (Vieroslav Matušík – cl, Bohumil Trnečka – tn, V. Machek – pf, F. Mitterhauszer – banjo, A. Janák – tu, M. Lánik – bgui, Bohuslav Synek – dr) with which he intensivelly recorded music for Czechoslovak Radio and realized programs for emerging TV broadcast

  • 1958

    founder of The Orchestra Of Siloš Pohanka (Juraj Lehotský, Ladislav Liso, Siloš Pohanka – tr, Imrich Kuruc, Rudolf Riavec – sxa, Ján Štubňák – sxt, Jiří Bureš – sxb, Alois Bouda (occasionally Ladislav Gerhardt and František Havlíček) – pf, Miro Lánik – bgui, Bohumil Synek – dr) which in 1960s became the most used orchestra specifically for television. Collaborators with the orchestra were composers and arrangers Alois Bouda, František Havlíček, Eduard Parma, Tomáš Seidmann, Vieroslav Matušík, Pavol Zelenay and others.

  • 1964

    Orchestra Of Siloš Pohanka performing in the first co-production Slovak-Austrian movie Jazz For Two (vocal soloists Gabriela Hermélyová and Zuzana Lonská)

  • 1965

    performing at International Jazz Festival in Prague (CZ, with compositions of Bohumil Trnečka)

  • 1970 – 1978

    solo career (mostly as a studio musician in Munich, Germany)

  • 1979

    return to Bratislava

  • 1985

    together with Braňo Hronec renewed and led the Czechoslovak Television Dance Orchestra in Bratislava

Siloš Pohanka significantly contributed to the enforcement of the swing model in Slovak popular music. He brought a number of new musicians to the scene in his orchestras.

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