WORLD Cup songs are usually male-only affairs, but not anymore.

Ahead of this year’s tournament in South Africa, a group of teenage girls from Oxfordshire has recorded an anthem from a female point of view.

The Englandettes are Pippa Siret-Godfrey, 19, Sarah King, 19, Senga Horsman, 18, and Hanna Smith, 19, who all met at John Mason School in Abingdon.

They recorded the vocals for Play That Sexy Football after Pippa’s mum, Lucy Siret, 46, and her bandmates, Charlie McGlynn and Maria Hunter, wrote the song and recorded the backing track.

Miss King said: “All the football songs are male, big man, shouty songs, so we thought that girls should have their own one.

“It is about the fact that girls always support the football team and they want the boys to bring the cup home. Girls should be able to relate to it because it is all about our own way of supporting.

“It is a girl power kind of thing – it gets the girls involved.”

She added: “I am forced to watch the normal stuff with my boyfriend, but England means something because it’s where I am from.

“It will be interesting to see what happens as we are just four young girls trying something out.

“We are not expecting it to be massive, it is just a bit of fun. But we have had quite a few downloads already without any promotion.”

The teenager said she was surprisingly excited about the football tournament, which starts on June 11.

She said: “It feels like we are a part of it now we have done this, we feel more involved.”

Miss Siret-Godfrey said: “It’s the right time of year to bring out something like this, but it is just a bit of fun.

“It is about the girls taking control and chanting and supporting the boys.

“It was a bit embarrassing recording it at first, but it is good fun.”

Mr McGlynn said: “We sat down one night, had two glasses of wine and thought we would do a song. We put together this song about the girls’ point of view of supporting England.

“We put the song together but we thought we needed a girl band, and Lucy said her daughter was in a band.”

The track was recorded using renewable energy at Mr McGlynn’s energy centre, Race Energy.

He said: “The message is support England and support the environment.”

The song is available on iTunes for 79p.