Actually a capacitive speaker wire connected to a load sensitive amplifier can easily provide a listening experience anyone can smell. 
For example a old Threshold Statis amplifier (built without an output inductor to isolate it from excessive capacitive loads) combined with the late great Polk Audio Cobra Cables (a very capacitive cable) results in the amp going into full bore very high frequecy oscillations, an event anyone can easily smell as the amp burns up. 
Consider that even before the capacitive cable load causes your amp to fail completely, it makes the amp very very unhappy. I would suggest that if you can hear the difference between two cables, at least one of them is badly engineered (high capacitance, poor shielding, non-standard terminations, likely all three).
Measure the capacitance of your speaker and interconnect cables and then replace them with ones with lower values and then I suspect you might hear better sound. Of course the cable believers will never do this.
Regards,
Frank Van Alstine
Hi Frank and company,
First off, I am disappointed in a lot of the comments here, way off base. The guy was just asking for some recommendations of cables, not your opinions as to if they can be heard or not. If I ran this forum, I would throw most of this thread in the wastebend. i think that Frank's comments do deserve merit.
Frank, lol, I had a pair of those cables. Fortunately, my Mitsubishi amplifier withstood those cables. I got rid of them as soon as I could. i haven't played with speaker cable much, but have played with IC's a lot. It seems to me some cables really do make a big difference, while others are a waste of time. I will tell you, in my own opinion, Grover cables do make a difference, but you can't use them with other brands. For some reason, other cables just don't match, centerjistically with them.
There is a guy on the circle who makes silver cables for about $50 a pair. Not directional at all. The feedback has been good. Kool Cables Inc. are good too. For those who question break-in of cables, go look for reviews of John's gold cables. Yes, they are expensive, but they do have a period of break-in.
It is worth noting that from what I read here about Frank's gear, that he has gone a long way to make sure that cables don't seem to make a hell of beans difference between them. So probably just get some good quality cables, like Blue Jean, Element, KCI and unfortunately, a few others I have forgotten. It has been my experience over the years, that how they are terminated seems to make a big difference. Yes, plating on the cable itself can make it sound brittle or harsh on the upper frequencies. It is the quality of the plating that does make a difference.
Let's face it, some people can hear cable differences as welll as component differences, and others can not So I give respect for all who can not hear the differences.
Oooh, on the topic of directional cables, The ones that are supposed to be directional, well the differences between the correct hookup and the other direction is subtle at best. To exaggerate a bit, the cable seems closed-in, sorta like listening to your stereo standing outside the screendoor versus sitting in the sweet spot.
By the way as for this blind testing, I do it all the time. Because I am blind, I have no choice but to listen to them with my eyes closed. Anhd let me debunk this myth about blind people having better hearing than my sighted counterparts. WRONG!!!!! You just learn how to use what you have. As a matter of fact, thanks to my brother when I was about ten, with a popgun to my left ear, I can't hear above 4K down about 60DB past that. So most of the imaging cues I get to miss out. So stick that in your pipe and smoke it.
Ray Bronk