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Casting Crowns - Who Am I Ukulele Chords

ChordsG, D, Em, C
Strumming↓-↓↑-↓↑-↓↑

Before you play, tune your ukulele and use the tools below to set up your view and flow.

  • Ukulele G chord diagram Fingering: 0-2-3-2Ukulele G chord diagram
  • Ukulele D chord diagram Fingering: 2-2-2-0Ukulele D chord diagram
  • Ukulele Em chord diagram Fingering: 0-4-3-2Ukulele Em chord diagram
  • Ukulele C chord diagram Fingering: 0-0-0-3Ukulele C chord diagram


Who am [G]I? That the [D]Lord of all the [Em]earth
Would [D]care to know my [C]name, would [D]care to feel my [C]hurt
Who am [G]I? That the [D]bright and morning [Em]star
Would [D]choose to light the [C]way, for my [D]ever wandering [C]heart


Not [Em]because of who I [D]am, but [C]because of what you’ve [D]done
Not [Em]because of what I’ve [D]done, but [C]because of who you [D]are


[G]I am a [D]flower quickly [Em]fading, here [D]today and gone [C]tomorrow
A [D]wave tossed in the [C]ocean (ocean), a vapor in the [G]wind
Still You [D]hear me when I’m [Em]calling, Lord, you [D]catch me when I’m [C]falling
And you’ve [D]told me who I [C]am, I am [G]yours


Who am [G]I? That the [D]eyes that see my [Em]sin
Would [D]look on me with [C]love, and [D]watch me rise [C]again
Who am [G]I? That the [D]voice that calmed the [Em]sea
Would [D]call out through the [C]rain, and [D]calm the storm in [C]me


Not [Em]because of who I [D]am, but [C]because of what you’ve [D]done
Not [Em]because of what I’ve [D]done, but [C]because of who you [D]are


[G]I am a [D]flower quickly [Em]fading, here [D]today and gone [C]tomorrow,
A [D]wave tossed in the [C]ocean (ocean), a vapor in the [G]wind
Still You [D]hear me when I’m [Em]calling, Lord, You [D]catch me when I’m [C]falling,
And You’ve [D]told me who I [C]am, I am [G]yours

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AlbumCasting Crowns
Year2003
KeyG

How to play Who Am I on Ukulele (Step-by-step)

Casting Crowns - Who Am I on ukulele requires 4 chords and 5 core chord transitions. You can find the full step-by-step guide below. Before you start, tune your instrument. The song uses the ↓-↓↑-↓↑-↓↑ pattern; practice it muted first, or simplify to downstrokes while you learn the changes.

Who Am I uses these transitions most often: D → C (20), C → D (12), and Em → D (12). These transitions may feel a little challenging at first, but with steady practice you can play this song quickly.When you are ready, begin with G - D chord transition.

1. G → D chord transition

To move from G to D;

  1. Lift your index finger from C string fret 2 and place it on G string fret 2.
  2. Slide your middle finger from A string fret 2 to C string fret 2.
  3. Slide your ring finger on E string from fret 3 to fret 2.
G to D

2. D → Em chord transition

To move from D to Em;

  1. Lift your index finger from G string fret 2 and place it on A string fret 2.
  2. Slide your middle finger from C string fret 2 to E string fret 3.
  3. Lift your ring finger from E string fret 2 and place it on C string fret 4.
D to Em

3. D → C chord transition

To move from D to C;

  1. While playing D, first lift your index finger and middle finger.
  2. Lift your ring finger from E string fret 2 and place it on A string fret 3.
D to C

4. C → G chord transition

To move from C to G;

  1. Lift your ring finger from A string fret 3 and place it on E string fret 3.
  2. Place index finger on C string fret 2.
  3. Place middle finger on A string fret 2.
C to G

5. C → Em chord transition

To move from C to Em;

  1. Lift your ring finger from A string fret 3 and place it on C string fret 4.
  2. Place index finger on A string fret 2.
  3. Place middle finger on E string fret 3.

A short, data-driven summary of the chord flow in Who Am I.

  • Who Am I includes 72 chord transitions, 5 of them unique.
  • These transitions represent 0.02% of all chord transitions in Ukulelearn.
  • Who Am I contains 5 of the top 10 transitions across Ukulelearn.
  • These transition patterns show how Who Am I connects to the rest of Ukulelearn. Mastering them helps you move to similar songs faster.
    After D, the most likely next chords across Ukulelearn are G (29%), A (17%), and Em (17%).
    • D → G: 29%
    • D → Em: 17%
    After C, the most likely next chords across Ukulelearn are G (35%), F (16%), and D (11%).
    • C → G: 35%
    • C → D: 11%