Thanks, Darryl. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. While this quarter was undoubtedly a challenging one, I’d like to provide context on the factors impacting the current operating environment, including the shift we have seen in consumer dynamics within our Journeys business, what we have learned from them and most importantly, the immediate actions we are taking to improve our performance against a difficult macro backdrop across the industry. Before we get into the details, I will start by underscoring that despite the near-term turbulence, which we have reflected in our revised outlook for fiscal ‘24, I am confident in our footwear-focused strategy and believe in our future prospects. While the first quarter was even tougher than we anticipated for Journeys, both Johnston & Murphy and Schuh excelled, delivering record Q1 sales and demonstrating the benefit of our multi-division multi-channel operating model. In addition, we advanced many of the initiatives underlying this strategy that drive value. We continue to grow our digital business and we further strengthen the connections with our consumer through progress on loyalty and customer insights. As a company, we have in the past successfully navigated multiple adverse retail cycles across our businesses, with the most recent being the COVID shutdowns in calendar 2020. As the leading destination for fashion footwear for teens, Journeys track record of performance, including record sales and profits in the year following the shutdowns, demonstrates the resilience of the business, the importance of its value proposition to the consumer, and the ability to rebound from economic headwinds and fashion shift. I am confident we will come out on the other side of this environment in an even stronger competitive position. That said we are not satisfied with our Q1 performance. Following a positive end to the holiday season, our outlook in March assume that this year’s normalized spring deliveries would have had a more positive impact against the pronounced negative trends that emerged early in the quarter with our team customer at Journeys. However, business did not improve as we change seasons in the latter half of March and into April. It’s clear that given the dramatic change in consumer sentiment in recent months, we continue to contend with a bumpy post-pandemic reset with factors such as inflation, lower tax refunds and competitive discounting, particularly in athletic footwear, disrupting normal seasonal demand and shopping patterns at Journeys. Consumers continue to stretch their wallets and make harder choices on what to buy or not buy, particularly after filling up their closets with our footwear and other offerings earlier in the pandemic. That said, consumers are responding well to newness and seeking more of it, and we and our brands, are moving quickly to create more newness after a focus primarily on core products. Given the pressure Journeys is under, we are taking significant further actions to mitigate the near-term environment and consumer shift. We are aggressively working to reposition the product assortment at Journeys as quickly as possible to meet the customers’ appetite for newness. In addition, we have now identified more than 100 Journeys stores for closing and up to $40 million in cost savings, adding to the targets we initially laid out. We are also working harder to rationalize our inventory and making good progress against it. And Tom will address some of these efforts in more detail. Despite the challenges in Q1, I’d like to highlight some key accomplishments. We achieved record top line results for both Schuh and J&M, highlighting the in-depth work we did to evolve their customer value propositions, to set the strategy in both the retail and branded sides of our business and execute well to it. We grew our comparable digital sales by 7% over last year, while digital penetration grew to 21% of total retail sales versus 19% last year. And we advanced important strategic initiatives that will help set the stage for longer term sustainable growth and profitability objective, which I will discuss further momentarily. Now moving to our businesses in more detail and starting with retail. The Journeys consumer already squeezed by inflation and lower tax refund dollars did not respond to the change of seasons as we had anticipated as we shifted away from boots into spring merchandise, continuing instead to trade down to lower price points and take advantage of the abundance of discounted athletic products elsewhere in the market. This elevated inventory in the channel continues to suppress demand for other products. Additionally, with closets already full, we saw lower store traffic and demand for a number of key styles this year. As a result, Journeys did not see the desired sell-through in some of its core fashion athletic and casual products. Journeys countered with reduced receipts of core items and increased promotions and markdowns to clear slower moving non-core goods, taking these actions, along with others, like returns to vendors to rationalize inventory. Encouragingly, we saw meaningful strength for newness in Journeys’ assortment. However, the demand for that product versus our core styles was greater than we typically see in a given season. The core differentiator of the Journeys model is its ability to rotate its assortment quicker than competitors given our unparalleled vendor relationships and the team is working diligently to make those adjustments. This will take some time to execute, but should begin to be evident by the back half of the year. While our store traffic remains challenged, our digital business was a bright spot. Having digested the outsized digital growth from the pandemic, we have inflected to growth again. Although consumer behavior remains unpredictable in the near-term, we are taking extensive efforts to bolster our Journeys business, if while we weather the current environment. These include working with our brand partners in a bigger way to test new brands and styles, tell additional unique brand and product stories and garner even more allocated and exclusive products. Conducting a much deeper dive on consumer and market insights to better understand current purchase intent and inform our future actions; strengthening Journeys’ presence in key marketing channels to drive awareness, traffic and sales, such as boosting paid search and paid social media investments; and refining our in-store selling approach using input from recently completed time and activity studies, such as adjusted selling tactics, promoting use of new technology and tools in stores and incentivizing our store employees to focus further on engaging with customers and driving conversion. Moving now to Schuh. The business delivered another quarter of strong double-digit comp growth, driven by solid increases in both stores and digital, with store traffic and average selling prices up. Schuh continues to benefit from a resilient consumer despite a challenging UK economy. Operating income improved nicely over last year, driven by stronger gross margins, market share gains and at roughly 40% of sales, a digital platform that leads our overall company. Efforts to improve access to the top brands and styles and reinvigorate its relationship with its customers through marketing and loyalty initiatives has resulted in a business operating much more effectively. These successful efforts inform the playbook for what we are now executing at Journeys. Touching on loyalty. In its first year, the total Schuh Club members now stand at 1.6 million, and accounted for 27% of total sales in Q1, well surpassing expectations, continuing to capitalize on loyalty remains key to driving market share gains and repeat customer purchases going forward. Congratulations to the Schuh team for driving the business to even greater heights. Switching to our branded platform. Johnston & Murphy remained a bright spot, delivering its ninth consecutive quarter of double-digit top line growth as well as the strongest gross margin and operating income gains among our businesses. This record start to the year was driven by strength across all channels, digital, retail and wholesale, as the business continued to capitalize on the long-tail of the post-pandemic work plate casualization trend. J&M’s more affluent consumer is proving resilient against the challenging macro backdrop. But most importantly, J&M’s assortment continues to resonate, led by casual, and the Upton and Amherst franchises, in particular, as well as major strength in apparel, which grew 35%. Finally, we are very encouraged by the traction of J&M Insider’s affinity program, which is now approaching 800,000 members. Not only is it driving stronger customer engagement and higher average transaction size with our existing customers, but nearly two-thirds of new customers are joining the program, which should result in better retention and customer value. I could not be more pleased with J&M success, the team’s effort to fundamentally reposition and reimagine the business as a more lifestyle-oriented brand in the face of a sea change in where-to-work trends is driving outstanding and sustainable results. And there is a lot of runway ahead of us. With the product foundation in place, we are now focused on expanding our marketing reach to tell a bigger story and increase J&M’s awareness as we invest for the next leg of growth. In finishing out the divisional recap, Genesco Brands Group surpassed our expectations in the quarter despite going up against large sell-ins to accounts that were replenishing from supply chain disruption in Q1 last year. Results were driven by strengthening performance in the value channel and improved gross margins as freight costs ease, contributing to breakeven operating income. While there is more work to be done, Q1 was an encouraging start to the year that we believe should progress further as headwinds subside over the course of fiscal ‘24. Now I would like to touch on our outlook. Given our Q1 results and the lack of visibility into consumer demand, we are taking a much more conservative view for the remainder of the year. The second quarter is off to a similar start as Q1 for Journeys. And looking forward, even with shopping catalysts, like back-to-school and holiday, we are not planning for a change in the trend. We anticipate consumers will continue to primarily shop when there is a reason, which will be at a time when our product assortment will also better reflect the newness our customer is craving. And we expect some benefit here. Beyond this, we are not factoring in a shift in consumer patterns or economic improvement. Looking at the longer-term horizon, fundamental to our success and capitalizing on the opportunities ahead of us is executing on the six pillars of our footwear-focused strategy, the right strategy for moving our business forward. We have made progress in several areas and while it is still early in the year, I would like to briefly update you on a few of the strategic initiatives we are implementing. Beginning with Journeys’ loyalty program, part of the third pillar of our strategy, deepening consumer connections and insights, we soft launched Journeys’ All access earlier this month. Starting in June, you will see us fully launch the program to consumers as we gear up for back-to-school. We could not be more excited about how this will amplify our connection with our customer as loyalty has done with our other brands. This platform provides fun and creative ways to connect with our keen customer base and incentivizes them to consolidate their branded purchases with Journeys as they achieve higher tiers. With Journeys All Access rolling out, we are also better leveraging our investments in data analytics and personalization to increase customer retention rates and drive size and frequency of purchases. Next, as we work to accelerate our digital business, the first pillar in our strategy, we continue to ramp up a variety of initiatives at Journeys to fuel digital growth back to the double-digit rates we saw both before and during the pandemic. One example of the steps we are taking to drive growth is increasing the number of styles available to online consumers. Year-to-date, we are up more than 10% versus the same time last year and up 50% versus 2 years ago. And we are better highlighting the availability of new product releases and launches of products exclusive to Journeys. Following Journeys’ loyalty rollout, we also look forward to the launch of buy online, pick up in store at Journeys and J&M later this year, which aligns with our second pillar of maximizing the relationship between our physical and digital channels. Rolling out our new point-of-sale hardware and software, including new mobile devices, was a foundational step toward enabling BOPAs functionality. We expect to complete the U.S. rollout in a few weeks and the Canadian rollout in July. BOPAs represents as much as 20% of Schuh’s online sales, and we expect Journeys and J&M to see benefits like this over time. Earlier this month, we also completed our receiving automation project at our largest distribution center, which not only reduces labor costs, but also accelerates how quickly we can make new products available to customers for purchase, both in store and online. In addition, we continue to make progress on moving Journeys’ footprint off-mall. We are testing and learning in places such as power centers across multiple markets. Supported by ramped up marketing campaigns to build awareness, we have so far opened 13 off-mall locations out of the 25 pilot stores we currently have planned. We still have work to do, but we are so far encouraged by the early reads and believe this initiative will represent a key element in Journeys’ growth moving forward. In closing now, before handing the call over to Tom, I would like to thank all of our people. The incredible dedication of each of you drives our business forward and is especially inspiring during challenging times. Although, we faced some near-term turbulence, I believe in our ability to successfully navigate these dynamics and come out ahead as we leverage our uniquely positioned retail and branded businesses, our commitment to innovation with our footwear-focused strategy and leadership positions with Journeys in teen fashion footwear. And with that, I will pass it to you, Tom.