I can't understand how any non-black-letter fonts came to be called "Gothic".
Here are a few that I made for Casady & Greene back in the early '90s.
Except for the last, none have ths slightest relation to either Times or Gothics.
(The images are screen fonts are not antialiased. The printed versions are much nicer.)
The last of these is Vremya, which is based on Times Roman. It's the font that was used to print Gorbachev's speeches during his last visit to the US before he shut down the USSR. After that, we heard from several customers that the Soviet Consulate in San Francisco was requiring all Russian-language documents to be printed using our Cyrillic fonts.
I've seen both Abilene and Black Knight on TV several times.
I'm sure I've posted the following here before, but here they are again.
Here's a paperback novel cover using Black Knight for the title. The shape of the F has been modified in Photoshop. (The back cover has some text in Black Knight, too.)
And here's a Bluegrass CD cover using Dry Gulch. I think Grisman may have done it himself.