Salvete!
I just finished reading the four Catiline Orations, and I liked them so much that I decided to write a number of articles about the history of the plot and the language (vocabulary, rhythm, syntax…) employed by the most famous latin orator.
The first article is an introduction to the political situation of that (dark) period of the roman republic and to some important events which occurred during the years before Cicero’s consulship (63 b.C.).
I’m also planning to add a record of the famous incipit (Cat. I, 1-2: from “Quo usque tandem” to “machinaris”) to the third article of the series. So, you visitors of the “audio” thread: cavete! 
Sententias vestras treppide exspecto, valete!
I’ve read the first (hastily) and the third (scrupulously) and loved them both. I hope to get back into them some day. Maybe your writing and recording will be just the prompt I need!
Best,
David
post scriptum - quam ob rem treppide uocem tuam paras, qui sine dubio plus studii plusque Latinae quam nos colit ac possidet? mihi potius exspectare treppide decet, mihi potius tuam uocem censere probitatem Latinam omnibus praebituram!
quam ob rem treppide uocem tuam paras, qui sine dubio plus studii plusque Latinae quam nos colit ac possidet?
Hahaha. Gratias sescentas de verbis tuis ago, bellum, vero autem arbitror hoc non sine dubio habendum. 
Iam adest nuntius secundus. 
As promised, I added a “recitatio”. Here is the third part 