There's quite a bit to doing it right. Sometimes cross-polarized light is needed if the copy material is reflective or shiny, with polarizing sheets over the lights, and a polarizing filter on the camera lens. Getting good color is tricky without a color temp meter on hand and a set of corrective filters - either gels over the lights or CC and LB correction filters on the lens. Modern LED lighting is cooler and safer than old fashioned hot lights, but be aware that you get what you pay for. Most of the specifications on cheaper LED units is marketing BS; and two units of the same model and manufacturer might not even match, or provide even illumination without a projected pattern. I use mid-priced (about $700 for the pair) rim-style LED oval discs free of any pattern; but even these had to be individually adjusted to match, and didn't reach the upper end of their advertised color temperature (so still need some supplemental filtration).
So there are all kinds of way of doing it, with very simple old Smith Victor lights and photoflood bulbs - or even hardware store clamp-lamps - clear up to museum grade copy systems costing $75,000 or more. And while 45 degree angles are the common advice, you really need to have something adjustable per height and angle, and experiment for what works best.
You also want some black heat-resistant studio flocking fabric on hand, available from the lighting selection of most big camera stores or studio outlet, to prevent reflections form anything metallic or bright in the vicinity. And I emphasize heat-resistance if you are using traditional hot lights - they are hot and can cause fire if you're careless.