I call it generative asemic poetry. It is a direct text-based representation of the glyphs seen in the video (and yes, those glyphs *do* work together to conjure the sounds heard in my live coding setup).
Each stanza corresponds to a row. Each word corresponds to a glyph in the row. The syllables in the word are used to encode the actual pattern of the glyph.
The syllables used for encoding are organized physiologically: pa, fa, thu, de, yu, go, ha. The sounds start in the front of the mouth and work backwards.
Only 7 syllables are needed to encode 3-bits, because 0 is used as a separator in the bitrune parser.
With any luck, these poems should work on screen readers. Gibberish, but patterned gibberish that faithfully represents the symbols used to conjure the music.
With any luck, these poems should work on screen readers. Gibberish, but patterned gibberish that faithfully represents the symbols used to conjure the music.