Eugen Suchoň was born on September 25, 1908, in the house opposite the Roman Catholic
parish office on Farská Street (today's space near the old Pezinok Cultural Center air conditioning) in
Pezinok, (Slovakia). His father, Ladislav Suchoň, was an
organist and teacher. His mother, Serafína Suchoňová, was a piano teacher, and it was from her that he received his first piano tuition. The house was always filled with music and, as a small child, he would listen from under the piano when his father rehearsed at home with other musicians. In 1920, at the age of twelve, he started taking piano lessons at the
Bratislava School of Music with the distinguished musician
Frico Kafenda. Later, from 1927 to 1931, he continued his studies with the same teacher at the newly established Academy of Music in Bratislava. His early works include several piano compositions and a choral work
Veľky Pôst (The Great Fast). He graduated from his composition classes with the
Sonata in A-flat for Violin and Piano and a
String Quartet (op. 2, 1931, revised 1939). His two-year studies at the
Prague Conservatoire under
Vítězslav Novák set the seal on the thorough training he had received from Kafenda. Compositions from this period include a
Piano Quartet (1933), and the
song cycle Nox et solitudo for
mezzo-soprano and small orchestra or piano (1932) based on a poem by
Ivan Krasko,
Little Suite with Passacaglia for piano (1930, orchestrated in 1967),
Serenade for Brass Quintet and the
Burlesque for Violin and Orchestra. All these works show an already distinguished and mature composer. During this time Eugen Suchoň taught music theory at the Academy of Music and Drama in Bratislava (1933). His works from this period are in a late
Romantic idiom with elements of folk
modality combined with
chromaticism. In particular the popular male choral cycle
O horách ("Of mountains") was a seminal work which established a Slovak national style. This was followed by his monumental cantata,
The Psalm of the Sub-Carpathian Land (1938). Many folksong arrangements date from this period, which culminated in his opera
Krútňava (
The Whirlpool, 1949). ==Middle years==