I'll have to try some of the Gotham, I had not seen those details.
I did make a batch of Grimm TPR mic cables a few years ago, specifically for ribbon mics. I appreciate it's dense insulation, similar to coax cable, and how that reduces cable microphonics, and I believe they tout low capacitance. The stuff is a coiling nightmare though, you'd never use it in the field. If it sounds any 'better' I can't tell it, not with my short studio runs.
Wiring veer:
I also recently rewired my studio mic panel to control room runs with AES 110Ω rated wire, not really any more expensive than standard wire, and also by nature lower capacitance. Hedging my bets that every little bit counts with ribbon mics.
I have a bucket of budget mic cables I got for a mic splitter I built, I need to give them to some hapless young band or something. They are a nightmare to coil also, I avoid them. When I did comparative DIY capacitance measurements of a bunch of different types if wire, it was astonishingly high capacitance too. One interesting number I'm not entirely sure how to interpret apples to apples is 'impedance'. Using a handheld L(inductance)C(capacitance)R(existence) meter, you get readings at choices of frequency (120Hz and 1K) along with series versus parallel measurement. That cheap cable gave by far the lowest impedance reading of any, which suggests the cable itself presents a significant load on the signal, even with short runs. Maybe the wire to use with zingy sounding cheap condensers!