Thank you, John. And good morning, everyone. Select had a great start to 2023 as we push forward with new all-time high quarterly revenue performance. Margins also advanced notably across the board with oilfield chemicals reaching a record gross margins resulting from our continued market share gains and customer demand for our higher margin proprietary manufactured products supporting our fluid matched initiatives. Our net income nearly doubled, and we posted the highest quarterly adjusted EBITDA performance since 2018. While the macro environment settled from the high growth base of 2022, Select clearly still has positive company specific trends and secular growth drivers in our core business model of providing full lifecycle water solutions to a more complex and sustainable energy industry. Our business benefited from enhanced customer opportunities resulting from our recent acquisitions, and more efficient operations across the board, as well as a number of recently executed development opportunities across multiple basins. These combined to produce positive monthly progression throughout the quarter. 9% revenue increase was bolstered by having an additional month of breakwater operations relative to fourth quarter, but the bulk of the increase was driven by higher utilization and recent investments across our Water Infrastructure segment. As John discussed, we have contracts in place supporting attractive incremental investments into both new infrastructure and enhancements to existing assets that we expect will yield additional revenue and margin expansion through the year. Recent stock market dislocation related to non-energy sectors provided us with an attractive opportunity to authorize and initiate a $50 million share buyback program in addition to the remaining $8.5 million authorization we previously had in place, to fully executed the two buyback programs, in combination with the quarterly dividend at its current level would distribute over $80 million to shareholders this year. With our expectation of ample free cash flow over the back half of this year, we believe over the course of 2023 we will meaningfully reduce the current draw on our sustainability linked credit facility from its March 31 balance after fully funding both our 2023 CapEx program and the potential fulfillment of our share buyback authority. As I noted on our February call, our primary focus entering 2023 after two years of rapid organic growth coupled with a dozen acquisitions was to meaningfully boost our operating margins. As cost inflation gradually moderates, our continued integration and internal efficiency efforts allow us to carry a larger part of every earned revenue dollar through to the bottom line. Though, some elements are consistent, the primary means by which we accomplish this varies somewhat by segment. In Water Services our primary focus is on internal efficiency and taking costs out of the system, whether it's on new procurement initiatives, in-sourcing third party labor after stretching to accommodate rapid growth, or harmonizing operations across the diverse acquisition footprint. Water Infrastructure, we're developing highly accretive greenfield projects, as well as boosting the utilization and margins on existing infrastructure through networking investments and expansion opportunities. Additionally, throughout 2022 and into 2023, our Chemicals group has continued to grow market share in our higher margin proprietary product offerings. We continue to shift manufacturing capacity towards these customized products, while limiting our production of more commoditized products and lower margin blending operations. With the growing interconnectedness of our operations, delivering the industry's only true full lifecycle water and chemistry solution, we're excited to soon become Select Water Solutions. Our fixed infrastructure, mobile logistics and customized chemistries, combined to provide an exceptional opportunity for our customers to improve their cost efficiency and well productivity while reducing their environmental footprint. First quarter revenue of $417 million, grew by $35 million sequentially. Net income increased from $7.6 million to $13.7 million sequentially, even after accounting for the $11.6 million impact of a non-cash charge for trademark abandonment related to our ongoing rebranding efforts. Additionally, adjusted EBITDA increased to $67.2 million from $52.2 million in the fourth quarter. Looking forward, we expect to build off this strong first quarter financial performance. While, we do anticipate recent relative weakness and natural gas prices to lead to a modest decline in rig counts and gas basins, which represent about 17% of our revenues year-to-date. We do not perceive material impacts to revenues from this or much impact to activity in the oil basins which represent more than 80% of our revenues. Accordingly, we expect to prioritize margin enhancement efforts and organic growth projects in the relative near term. In fact, even in the Haynesville shale, where we expect some of the more notable impacts from natural gas pricing weakness, we've executed multiple recent long-term contracts for new infrastructure projects, as produced water management remains a core priority for many of our customers. Now walking through the individual segments. The Water Services segment increased revenue by 10 million or a little less than 5%, with modest market share gains offsetting some weather related challenges from January. Our 2023 investments for this segment are primarily maintenance CapEx and we believe the second quarter will deliver similar revenue with a 100 to 200-basis point improvement to gross margins before G&A resulting from ongoing efficiency initiatives. Next, to Water Infrastructure, which was clearly the star performer of the first quarter. The recycling facilities and other infrastructure assets we recently acquired are delivering the volumes and economics we counted on. And while we continue to grow our Permian footprint through additional investment and acquisitions during the first quarter, the five non-Permian projects outlined in our earnings release, demonstrate our ability to drive new contracted high margin project opportunities across multiple other unconventional basins as well. Although this segment has the most upside potential in 2023 and into 2024, as our new projects continue to come online, the strength of the segments material outperformance in the first quarter leads us to a moderated growth outlook for the second quarter. Accordingly, we expect stable revenues in the second quarter relative to the first. So we expect to see continued margin improvement of 200 to 300 basis points, bringing gross margins before G&A back above 30%. The Chemical segment which continues to set new all-time highs for revenue and gross profit, increased its margins two percentage points nearly 20%. Water Treatment for recycling purposes is a secular tailwind for this group, much like it is for water infrastructure. And we expect revenues increased by low to mid-single-digit percentages, while gross margin percentage should hold relatively steady in the second quarter SG&A of $35.8 million was impacted by $2.9 million of transaction and rebranding costs in the first quarter. While the direct transaction costs in connection with recent acquisitions to decrease in the absence of further M&A, we see the next few quarters delivering similar transaction costs overall, given the ongoing rebranding efforts. In the back half of the year, we expect stable to modestly increased SG&A given the moderating but still elevated rate of labor inflation. That said, we anticipate SG&A reducing on a percentage of revenue basis back towards the 8% mark due to the anticipated top-line growth in the coming quarters. First quarter net CapEx of $21.2 million benefited from $6.7 million of assets sales. Since beginning our recent M&A activities and mid-2021, we have sold more than $45 million of non-core assets out of the dozen or so acquisitions in the last two years. This has helped us materially de risk, we're already very attractive deep value deals, and also help fund our most recent acquisitions. That said we do expect this asset sale pipeline will normalize over the rest of 2023 after a handful of remaining real estate and asset sale opportunities. Overall, we reiterate our 2023 net CapEx guidance of between $90 million to $130 million, after giving effect to roughly $20 million and expected full year asset sales. We expect depreciation and amortization expense to be in a low-$30 million range per quarter and tax expense to remain minimal through 2023. Overall cash flows were impacted by a little over $10 million of asset acquisitions during the quarter, as well as about $11 million of combined open market and tax withholding related share repurchases during the quarter. However, the bulk of the impact of cash flows during Q1 related to working capital. Free cash flow was impacted by a $79 million use of cash for working capital build, as we materially grew revenues while continuing to work through our systems integration and implementation efforts. Unlocking this working capital balance is a core focus and towards that goal, we are targeting a reduction of at least $75 million from our accounts receivable balance between the first quarter and the end of 2023, through these investments and improvements, with further reductions to be identified for 2024. Our primary integration challenges remain focused around our back-office processes associated with multiple electronic ticketing and invoice production systems, which have resulted in delayed timelines on delivering uniform and complete invoices to our customers. The rebranding effort, ticketing systems integrations and ERP integration and upgrade initiatives will greatly streamline our invoicing and cash collections in the back half of the year. In the interim, we expect second quarter cash collections from accounts receivable to notably improve over the first quarter following recent integration efforts. While we work through our ERP project implementation in the coming months, we will continue to find opportunities to improve upon our internal order cash processes. And I look forward to reclaiming a significant amount of deferred cash out of working capital and back onto the balance sheet with that $75 million goal clearly in mind this year. I'm confident we can further build upon that goal with additional DSO reductions beyond 2023. But hitting that initial goal this year is priority number one. We finished the quarter with $75 million drawn on our sustainability-linked credit facility and have $165 million of total liquidity. However, we expect to see these borrowings reduced and liquidity position meaningfully enhanced by year-end. Recent working capital challenges notwithstanding we continue to see a very robust cash flow profile ahead of us for the full year. With that, I'll hand it back to John for some final remarks, John?