In the early 1990s, soprano
Ruth Ziesak quickly established an international career in lyric soprano operatic roles, and as a song recitalist and concert singer.
She was born in the scenic Taunus Mountains region of Germany. In 1982 she began her vocal studies with
Elsa Cavelti at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst at Frankfurt am Main, Germany. She won a government study stipend in 1986, and in 1987 won the International Walther Grunner Prize in London.
This led to her first professional engagement when she joined the roster of the Stadttheater of Heidelberg in 1988. In 1990 she moved to the
Deutsche Oper am Rhein of Düsseldorf-Duisberg. In that year, she also won First Prize in the Lieder category of the 's-Hertogenbosch Competition. She made her debut as a Lieder recitalist in 1991 at the Vienna Konzerthaus.
In 1991, she sang the role of Pamina in
Mozart's The Magic Flute at the Salzburg Festival under the direction of
Sir Georg Solti. This highly successful performance brought her to international attention. Within the next two years, she debuted at La Scala, the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, the German State Opera in Berlin, the Dresden Semperoper, the Stuttgart Opera, Teatro Communale of Florence, and the Vienna State Opera. In 1993, she sang at the Bastille Opera of Paris for the first time, as Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro. Her Hamburg State Opera debut was in the same year, as the Baroness in Der Wildschütz by
Lortzing. Other major operatic roles include Ännchen in
Weber's Der Freischütz and Sophie in
Strauss' Der Rosenkavalier. Her London debut was as Ighino in Palestrina by
Hans Pfitzner, at Covent Garden in a production that was later taken to the stage of the
Metropolitan Opera in New York.
She is a frequent Lieder recitalist, often accompanied by
Gerold Huber, singing in many major cities of the world. Lieder recordings that
Ziesak has made include songs of
Wolf,
Strauss,
Debussy,
Reimann,
Schubert, and Zemlinsky. She also sings regularly in concerts with orchestras including the
Orchestre de Paris, the
Philadelphia Orchestra, the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the
Cleveland Orchestra, the
San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, the
Berlin Philharmonic, the
Vienna Philharmonic, and the
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. Her concert work recordings include
Beethoven's Ninth,
Haydn's oratorios and the "Timpani Mass,"
Bach cantatas and the Christmas Oratorio, Catulli Carmina by
Orff, sacred music by
Mozart, and
Stradella's Christmas Oratorio.
She also appears in major festivals in Europe (Salzburg, Berlin Festival, Frankfurt Festival, the Ludwigsburger Festival) and in Japan.