The "sonance" of the album’s title is an obsolete word for a sound or a tune.[3]
The opening track "Five Will Get You Ten" was originally credited to pianist Clark, but later co-writing credited was given to
Thelonious Monk. The song is now believed to have been written solely by Monk as "Two Timer", though never recorded by him. The song's
lead sheet was allegedly discovered by Clark in Monk's home,[4] or the home of jazz patroness
Pannonica de Koenigswarter,[5] and passed off as a Clark tune to pay for his drug addiction. The song's debut recording under its original title was by Monk's son,
T. S. Monk on his 1997 album Monk on Monk.
The
AllMusic review by Al Campbell awarded the album 3 stars and stated:
Even though A Fickle Sonance preceded McLean's intense 1962 album Let Freedom Ring, the playing remained in a swinging
blues-oriented style, showing no hint of the direction his music was about to take.[8]
In a 2016 review flophouse.com said:
If Jackie McLean’s career would’ve ended right after recording A Fickle Sonance, people would certainly have pointed out the alto saxophonist’s development from one of
Charlie Parker’s most proficient disciples to an alto saxophonist that made his mark with a series of excellent Blue Note recordings from 1959 to 1961, employing his highly emotional, piercing sound: already a great legacy. However, McLean raised the bars considerably the following years, breaking and entering hard bop’s living quarters with a series of vanguard recordings in cooperation with
avantgardists like
Ornette Coleman.[9]