She won the Potter Exhibition prize in 1888 and the Bennett Prize in 1889.
After completing her studies, she performed as a pianist and taught music in London.
There are claims that she was proposed to by Sir Henry Wood, whom she turned down.
One of her compositions, Romaunt of the Page, had its premiere at one of the Promenade Concerts on 6 October 1899.
She eventually married Nicholas Paramythioti (1871 - 1943) a businessman from Corfu, on 22 August 1903, one of many lodgers at the house in Hampstead (17 Goldhurst Terrace) that the family used to let rooms to.
Around this time she and Nicholas moved to France (where her two children were born, John in 1904 and Pamela in 1906) and she divided her time between France and Margate (where her parents had retired to and where they are both buried, having succumbed to the influenza epidemic, dying within a few days of each other in 1913).
She kept a diary, (which spans the years 1907 to 1918) which she wrote as a sort of âlife-guidance manualâ for her two children.
These few entries give an insight into her opinions about music and composition.
October 24, 1907
âIâm afraid my composing days are practically over.
I worked too hard once upon a time, & now I can only do very little without feeling my head spin round.
And as regards the opera it really does not matter; these light things are usually written & composed by half a dozen different people; they have no consistency whatever, but nobody minds.â
March 21, 1908
âI have been filling up my time with composition I have from past songs in hand; because expenses are heavy & I want to help.
I hope neither of my dears will want to take up music as a profession, by the way! Their Mummy should serve them as an awful warning.
If you put aside prima donas, infant prodigies, & a very few composers who happen to be momentarily the sage, there is no profession worse paid; & certainly there are very few more injurious to the health.â
May 23, 1908
âAll those things â hysterical religion, sentimental poetry, sad music â (of which I myself have written far too much!) all, as Ruskin says âwaste your strength in artificial sorrowâ â that strength which God gave you to bear your real troubles, to control your own nature, & to fight the battle of life.â
Her daughter, Pamela described Amy as a committed pacifist and the obituaries in The Stage and The Vote announcing her death both report that "shortly before her death a jury of musicians and literary men in Paris had awarded her the prize, open to the world, for a song in honour of the 'Drapeau Bleu' - the ensign of the League of Nations" (forerunner to the United Nations).