Thank you, Chris. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining our call. I am joined on the call by Eric Scheller, our COO. This morning, we released our first quarter 2024 results, which reflected another quarter of record results. Our first quarter results were driven by our strategy laid out during previous calls, focusing on prudent deployment of capital through return-based decision making and demand-driven pricing with extended contract tenors. By staying disciplined, we have continued to drive financial and operational performance to record levels, which we believe enhances and sustains unitholder value. Of note, we saw another quarter of record revenues, adjusted gross margin, adjusted EBITDA, distributable cash flow, average revenue generating horsepower and average revenue per revenue generating horsepower. Our utilization on both an average and period-end basis were also at record highs. Consistent with my commentary during our last call, we addressed several important components of our capital stack during the first quarter. In March 2024, the partnership opportunistically issued $1 billion of 7 1/8% senior notes due 2029 and redeemed all of our 725 million 6 7/8% senior notes due 2026. We used the remaining net proceeds to reduce the revolving credit facility. Our timing in the high-yield marketplace was virtually perfect with the spread to benchmark treasuries of 291 basis points, close to the recent lows last seen in January 2022. The issue was substantially oversubscribed and our notes have performed well even in light of the recent pressure on interest rates. Additionally, this issuance received a credit rating upgrade from Moody's. Further, on April 1, 2024, the holders of the partnership's Series A preferred units elected to convert an aggregate of 280,000 preferred units into 13,991,954 common units, which were issued effective as of April 2, 2024. 2024 guidance for distributable cash flow has been updated to reflect the impact of this conversion. The completion of these 2 activities sets us up well over the coming quarters to continue simplifying our capital structure, increase our public float of common units as well as opportunistically work on the refinancing of our 750 million of senior notes due in 2027. You may have noticed that our distributable cash flow coverage ratio, which was 1.41x, was slightly lower than our prior quarter's 1.48x coverage. Additionally, our leverage ratio of 4.27x as calculated under our credit facility, was slightly higher than our prior quarter's 4.1x. Both of these changes were due to onetime events that we believe will potentially enhance unitholder returns over the long run. Regarding our leverage ratio, as we mentioned during our last call, we were expecting 52,500 horsepower of new large horsepower units to be delivered during the first half of 2024. These units represented the remainder of our late 2022 order. We are happy to report that 47,500 of the 52,500 horsepower was delivered during the first quarter, and remaining 5,000 horsepower was delivered in April, often been deployed into the field under long-term contracts. The front-loaded purchase of these units led to the slightly higher leverage ratio for this quarter, but we believe our leverage ratio will begin to trend back towards 4.0x. Regarding our distributable cash flow coverage ratio, as I mentioned, our Series A preferred unitholders began converting their preferred units to common units in January. Then in early April, they converted another $280 million of preferred units to common units prior to our record date attributable to the first quarter results. This resulted in approximately 14 million common units being issued, at least half of which we believe have been sold into the open markets as of today. While the conversion of the preferred units has a very small impact on our distributable cash flow coverage ratio, the enhanced public [ float ] brought to our common units should be a positive. We believe that we will continue to increase our distributable cash flow coverage ratio and reduce our leverage ratio over time. During the coming quarters, we will continue to focus on opportunistically improving and simplifying our capital structure. Through the first 4 months of the year, 320 million out of 500 million of Series A preferred units have been converted to common units. We have refinanced our 2026 senior notes at an attractive financing rate and firmed up the fixed interest rate for almost all of our debt through 2025. As I mentioned, we used the proceeds from our March 2024 issuance of $1 billion of 7 1/8% senior notes due 2029 to redeem all of our 2026 senior notes and use the remainder of the proceeds to pay down our credit facility, resulting in $736 million borrowed under our credit facility at the end of the quarter. If you recall, the notional amount of our floating to fixed interest rate swap is $700 million and extends through December 2025 at about 125 basis points below the current SOFR rate. As such, we essentially locked in $2.45 billion of our $2.49 billion of indebtedness as of March 31, 2024, at a weighted average interest rate of 6.86%. We were extremely pleased with this offering and believe that our ability to refinance our existing indebtedness at attractive rates in the current market reflects investor support for our underlying core business. While we still have work to do, we think we have made strong progress so far, and we'll continue to be opportunistic in regards to maximizing our capital structure. As a reminder, we believe focusing on our capital structure, including the eventual refinancing of our senior notes to 2027, renewing our credit facility and fully exiting our Series A preferred units is the prudent course of action before we consider changes to our distribution policy. As we look forward to the rest of the year, we still believe the approach we laid out a few months ago during our previous earnings call remains the prudent path. We remain bullish on the long-term prospects of the natural gas industry, but also see near-term uncertainty, which has only grown since our last call. Inflation is turning out to be stickier than experts thought a mere 3 months ago, the Russia-Ukraine conflict is still ongoing and new tensions have arisen in the Middle East. We also have the upcoming election and interest rates that will be higher for longer including the potential for stagflation according to the ever insightful Jamie Dimon. As such, we believe 2024 is a year that we focus internally with reduced growth, enabling us to produce stable cash flows, reduce leverage and position USA Compression for long-term success. We will continue to improve internal operational efficiency, convert idle units to active status at attractive returns, pursue pricing improvements and strive to maximize return on growth capital through opportunistic purchasing of equipment. As we said last quarter, we believe this strategy will allow us to maintain operational and financial flexibility to weather any storms created by current geopolitical or economic headwinds. Before turning the call over to Eric Schuller to discuss first quarter results, I would like to make a few comments regarding safety. The most important thing we do is to ensure that our employees, contractors and customers return home safely each day. We are extremely proud of our tireless focus on safety that has resulted in a total recordable incident rate of 0 during the first quarter. I'm very proud of this accomplishment and thank every USA Compression employee for their commitment and strict adherence to our safety policies and procedures. With that, I will turn the call over to Eric Scheller, our COO, to discuss our first quarter highlights.