
Ciril Cvetko was a Slovene composer and conductor, brother of the musicologist Dragotin Cvetko.

Leo Funtek was a Slovenian violinist, conductor and arranger. He is best known for work as a music professor and for his 1922 arrangement of Modest Mussorgsky's piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition.
Vinko Globokar is a French-Slovenian avant-garde composer and trombonist.
Jani Golob is a Slovenian composer, violinist, arranger and professor.
Rok Golob is a Slovenian composer, producer, conductor and multi-instrumentalist.

Anton Nanut was a renowned Slovenian international conductor of classical music. From 1981 to 1999 he served as the chief conductor of the RTV Slovenia Symphony Orchestra. He was a professor of conducting at the Ljubljana Academy of Music and the artistic leader of the Slovene Octet in its most productive years.
Mojmir Sepe was a Slovenian composer, conductor, arranger and trumpeter.

Paul John Sifler (born Pavel Gerjol, December 31, 1911, Ljubljana, Slovenia – May 20, 2001, Hollywood, California, was a Slovenian composer and conductor.

Lucijan Marija Škerjanc was a Slovene composer, music pedagogue, conductor, musician, and writer who was accomplished on and wrote for a number of musical instruments such as the piano, violin and clarinet. His style reflected late romanticism with qualities of expressionism and impressionism in his pieces, often with a hyperbolic artistic temperament, juxtaposing the dark against melodic phrases in his music.

Jurij Slatkonja was a Carniolan choirmaster and the first residential Bishop of Vienna. He was also the first owner of an ex libris among the Slovenes. His crest contained a golden horse, based on a false etymology of his surname.

Danilo Švara was a prominent Slovenian orchestra conductor and composer. He was born on 2 April 1902 in San Giuseppe (Ricmanje) near Trieste, Italy, and died on 25 April 1981 in Ljubljana, Slovenia.