His compositions have been overshadowed by his formidable reputation as a teacher. However, Morris enjoyed ten years of creativity as a composer roughly between 1922 and 1932, writing symphonic and chamber music, songs, and choral works. One of the first, the
Fantasy String Quartet in A, won a
Carnegie Trust Award and was published as part of the
Carnegie Collection of British Music. Gerald Finzi thought highly of his music, and in an obituary piece (quoted in
Diana McVeagh’s biography of Finzi) he chose four pieces representing Morris at his most approachable –
Corrina’s Maying for chorus and orchestra, the
Concerto Piccolo, the
Suite for Chamber Orchestra and the six
Canzoni Ricercati for string orchestra or string quartet – with the
Toccata and Fugue for Orchestra at the other extreme and the Symphony in D (first performed on 1 January 1934 at the
Queen’s Hall) somewhere in the middle. According to
Stephen Banfield, Finzi regarded the last of the
Canzoni Ricercati as Morris's "one genuine masterpiece” and described it as a "grave and lovely" work. Much of his most powerful music is contrapuntally-led, as in the final Chaconne of the Sinfonia in C, the intense fugal and canonic writing of the
Canzoni Ricercati No 6 (using themes that maintain the flavor of mournful folk melodies), or the first movement of the Symphony in D, where the coda develops into a masterly canon. Today he is generally known for just one work, the hymn tune
Hermitage, used as the melody for the carol
Love Came Down at Christmas. The Sinfonia in C was revived at the English Music Festival in
Dorchester Abbey on 27 May 2022, with the
BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by
Martin Yates. ==Personal life==