Got it. Thanks for the clarification.
Once you have the correct measurements, where does that take you as far as music goes ? 
An interestingly leading question.
If you have not followed the thread on "path", a quick synopsis..
The characteristic impedance of a speaker cable driving a wildy varying load, will affect the settling time of the signal being delivered to the speaker. This comes from simple transmission line theory and measurement. This settling time will swing as much as 10 times the measured capability of humans perception.
This effect is not intuitive to most.
Many misconceptions exist out there, many websites by "technical" people are abysmally incorrect in the theory.
So do the specs matter? Yes, they do. Should anyone ignore their ears and go with specs? No.
Can I categorically state how specific parameters will sound with a specific amp and specific speakers? No. That dataset does not yet exist, as prior to my posting the information, the possibility of causation/correlation to the L/C numbers was tenuous; the relationship between cable Z and speaker Z was unknown.
I'll put a graph up in a few, so I can explain a bit more.
edit: already had a graph up of the type I was thinking of, so I'll use it.
This graph depicts the tradeoff between L and C for all cables. To wit, this particular one is of a coaxial braid pair, so there is no internal inductance to speak of.
http://www.audiocircle.com/image.php?id=11638The lower the overall energy storage of a cable, the lower and to the left the line gets...the EDC=1 line (dark blue) is lightspeed, nothing can exist below that line.
The higher a cable gets away from the origion, the slower the cable.
It would "behoove" all to use a graph of this type to locate every cable, and how it sounded, for all speakers. That is of course, a very long emperical path, I prefer the analytical one of course, so post the technicals so others can do that.
Cheers, John