By too much head I will presume the following, correct me if I presume wrong.
Are you referring to shut-off head? If so, then that is a common error in pump selection where the design point is met by the pump, but the pump has a steep curve geometry. This often happens because the cheapest pump that meets any design point often has a steep curve geometry and possibly a brutal shut-off head, producing tough and even nightmarish scenarios for control problems and system damage.
If that be the case, then you can do the following:
1 - Best solution is very often pump replacement with a flatter curve geometry pump.
2 - If you can accept lower pressure at the required flow rate, then you can trim impeller(s).
3 - If Shut-Off head is not too much higher, then controls can solve, but it will never be as good as a flatter curve geometry. I have done this for customers who got bad pumps, but I would not do that if the shut-off is brutal. You cannot take 225 psi and knock that down to 60 psi without having the valve scream, so you need multiple valves or super high cost one valve, with pressure relief back-up valve (pilot operated), and probably high pressure shut down alarm.
4 – Install VFD with aforementioned high pressure alarms, high pressure shut down, pressure relief, etc.
PUMPDESIGNER