Thanks, Dan. Good morning, everyone, and thank you all for joining. I will focus my remarks on three topics for today’s call: I’ll start with an overview of our first quarter results; next, I’ll touch on the current market environment; and finally, I’ll conclude with a few thoughts on our investment activity and current positioning. Starting off with earnings. The first quarter was another strong quarter as the portfolio continued to benefit from higher base rates and attractive pricing on new investments. We generated total net investment income of $0.50 per share in Q1, which represented an increase of 25% versus our prior period core earnings and resulted in dividend coverage of 136%. We declared total Q2 dividends of $0.44, consisting of our base dividend of $0.37, which is in line with our first quarter base, plus a $0.07 supplemental. As Tom will detail later, our net asset value increased from prior quarter to $17.09 per share, primarily driven by our Q1 earnings outpacing our dividend. Turning now to the current investment environment. The terms and pricing available to us today continue to be lender friendly. Recent deal activity indicates a potential recovery broadly syndicated in high yield markets, though, even with those green shoots sprouting sponsors have continued to turn to private credit as the preferred financing source for the majority of LBO transactions. From a macro perspective, bank stress initially increased volatility in Q1, but the knock-on effects of those vents were limited. Despite the Federal Reserve’s best efforts, inflation remains persistent, with companies continuing to pass-through price increases to the consumer. As a general note on our portfolio, over the last 18 months we’ve seen stability in the credit quality of our book. The majority of our companies have been able to appropriately adapt to the current inflationary environment, and we pay close attention to any companies that we think may have a difficult time passing through cost inflation to customers in the long run, while Q1 is traditionally a seasonally slow quarter for deal activity. Broader market volatility weighed further on M&A activity at the beginning of 2023 and led to an even slower quarter for capital formation. With this as the backdrop, we remain disciplined and focused on deploying primarily first-lien capital at highly attractive yields. In line with the broader market, new originations were down, but despite this, we remained highly selective. The weighted average yield at cost of these transactions was higher than the new fundings in the fourth quarter. Additionally, newly funded investments had more attractive economics than first quarter repayments. We ended Q1 with approximately $2 billion in investments at fair value. Lastly, I’d like to spend a few minutes on our current portfolio positioning. While this was my first quarter of leading the business, our strategy remained consistent. We are focused on primarily making investments to U.S. companies backed by high quality sponsors in the middle market. The median EBITDA across our core portfolio at the end of the first quarter was $73 million. Supplementing our core portfolio, we leveraged the sourcing capabilities of complementary lending strategies within the broader Carlyle network and capitalize on significant global resources that the firm has to offer to help us manage our risk. Our approach allows us to remain focused on disciplined underwriting, prudent portfolio construction and conservative risk management. Our portfolio remains highly diversified and is comprised of over 170 investments in more than 130 companies across over 25 industries. The average exposure to any single portfolio company is less than 1%; and 95% of our investments are in senior secured loans. So we feel very well positioned in the current environment. I’ll now hand the call over to our CFO, Tom Hennigan.