Fletcher was mad and is definitely a horrible person. (I'd argue Nieman is not really a great person, either...) Fletcher was angry that Nieman, one of his star pupils and proteges, betrayed him. That's why he screws with him at the concert and switches the song up. It's a power-play and revenge. When Nieman leaves, Fletcher has won.
Then, Nieman returns. Fletcher's victory is snatched away. Nieman's getting up for another round of bareknuckle boxing through jazz. This angers Fletcher. Nieman then asserts himself, calling the song ("I'll cue you in!") and forcing Fletcher to roll with it (jazz!) and take a dose of his own medicine. At the same time, this shows that Nieman is (1) willing to take heavy blows and not give up (very valued to Fletcher), and (2) Nieman is asserting himself as an artist in his own right (also very admired, respected, and lauded by Fletcher).
The result is that Fletcher, perhaps begrudgingly, forgives Nieman for screwing him over. Why? Because in that moment, they're not petty, angry, jerks, dictators, traitors, and whiners: they're jazz musicians and all that matters is the art.
This moment happens when Fletcher is right in Nieman's face, conducting him, bringing him in, them playing off each other. Watch Simmons' performance as Fletcher rights Nieman's cymbal for him! It's incredible stuff.
It makes the climax not about "Will Andrew 'win' the performance and get a prize?" but about, "What will happen between Fletcher and Andrew?" which is character-driven and more rewarding. It's the big reason why this climax is 1,000x better than almost any other sports/music movie where "the big game/concert" is the finale. Because most other movies like this make their climax about winning or losing: a coin toss outcome of a pre-scripted event. It's not fun.
This is. This is character dynamics and it's THRILLING.
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